Tuesday, December 16, 2025
51.0°F

The 'rest of the story' about the Kootenai Forest Plan

Brian Peck | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 10 months AGO
by Brian Peck
| January 26, 2015 9:07 AM

The Jan. 21 Hungry Horse News notes criticism of the new Kootenai National Forest Plan and Record of Decision from both timber interests and one environmental group.

Loggers claim that the projected cut of 47.5 million board feet is too low, while Headwaters Montana decries the wilderness limbo that the Ten Lakes Wilderness Study Area is left in — again.

However, this only provides a tip of the iceberg view of a Forest Plan that’s gone completely off the rails. Loggers and local politicos are fond of wailing loudly about wanting more “balanced use” of public lands after what they view as excessive environmental protection.

Yet a scan of the KNF Plan reveals the “rest of the story,” with “balanced” being perhaps the last word that comes to mind. In terms of excessive environmental protection, we find the following on the Record of Decision page 8:

• Wilderness: 93,700 acres (4.2 percent of the Forest)

• Recommended wilderness: 86,800 acres (3.9 percent)

• Wilderness study areas: 34,100 acres (1.5 percent)

• Wild an scenic rivers: 41,000 acres (1.8 percent)

• Research natural areas: 9800 acres (0.4 percent)

Over on the logging, roading and motorized-use side on the Record of Decision page 21 and 24, we find:

• Wheeled motorized use: 74 percent of the Forest (1.64 million acres)

• Snowmobiles allowed: 86 percent of the Forest (1.9 million acres)

• Mechanized use: 91 percent (2 million acres)

• General forest: 63.5  percent (1.4 million acres)

• Suitable timber base: 36 percent (791,400 acres)

• Projected timber volume: 47.5 million board feet with current budgets

• Allowable sale quantity: 80.2 million board feet with higher budgets

While it’s true that these logging numbers are down from the “bad old days,” when an allowable sale quantity of 227 million board feet turned the Kootenai into a moonscape visible from satellites, it’s clear that those who favor motorized, mechanized and industrialized public lands are the big winners here, with the KNF acting as a Chamber of Commerce to deliver goodies to the locals, and clear water, wildlife, and habitat protection be damned.

Brian Peck lives in Columbia Falls.

ARTICLES BY BRIAN PECK

April 24, 2014 12:25 p.m.

Watchdog groups to pull back from Forest Plan process

The following letter was sent to Flathead National Forest superviser Chip Weber:

March 31, 2019 2 a.m.

Weather or climate change?

In the last month, we’ve had three nights ranging from minus 18 to minus 22, so we can expect to hear this trumpeted by some as proof positive that global warming (climate change) is a hoax. But that of course is wrong and here’s why. What we experienced last week is nothing more than “weather,” experienced on one tiny part of Montana, on one really tiny part of the earth. Global warming, or climate change, deals with what’s happening with temperature, CO2, and weather planet-wide, and on a scale of multiple decades or centuries – not yesterday.

February 10, 2019 1 a.m.

Wolf paranoia being stirred up once again

In the Feb. 2 Inter Lake, “Wolves still a hot-button issue,” we see that those with an irrational, fact-free hatred of wolves are at it again, just as they were a decade ago. Unfortunately, the anti-wolf paranoia is once again being stirred up by some in the hunting community, long a pillar of American conservation, but here engaging in flights of pure fantasy.