Federal Judge Dispenses Potentially Fatal Blow To 24,000-Acre Tongass Old-Growth Logging Plan
A federal judge has dealt a potentially fatal blow to what wouldve been the largest timber sales in Tongass National Forest in decades. The court challenge ends the U.S. Forest Services plan to open up 24,000 acres of old-growth forest on Prince of Wales Island to commercial logging. It also halts road building for the 15-year project.
Conservationists had successfully blocked the federal governments attempt at pre-clearing large amounts of timber for sale without identifying the specific areas where the logging would actually occur.
But after the Forest Service argued throwing out the entire project would harm whats left of Southeast Alaskas timber industry, Judge Sharon L. Gleason gave both sides a final chance to make a case for and against allowing the agency to correct deficiencies in its review and move forward.
Her final ruling came down squarely against the Forest Services plan. In a 14-page order signed on Wednesday, Judge Gleason ruled the the economic harm of invalidating the timber sales does not outweigh the seriousness of the errors in the agencys handling of the project.
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https://www.alaskapublic.org/2020/06/25/court-deals-potentially-fatal-blow-to-logging-plan-for-tens-of-thousands-of-acres-of-tongass-national-forest/