FSEEE: Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics

Forest news and updates!

Forest Service employees and citizens working together to protect our National Forests

E-mail Print PDF

2003

Back Issues 2003

To purchase back issues of Forest Magazine, email your request to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or call 541-484-3170.

Bulldozed, burned and bombed, the national forests on fire are a place where most environmental concerns go out the window in the name of winning the war on wildfire. Here's another look at firefighting practices and their consequences.

Related stories:

Who Needs Help Like This? This is a personal story of Oregon's Biscuit Fire and the effects that government firefighting had on one family's property, physical environment and lives. by Jerry Sorensen
Red Rain. Effective? Yes. Toxic? Probably. by Patricia Marshall
Into the Black. Backfires might save lives. Or they might destroy property. Lighting backfires is an imprecise science. by Mark Blaine

Also:

From Tree to Sea. A Northwest Indian tribe asserts its cultural rights to harvest an old-growth cedar from the Olympic National Forest and opens a debate about tribal rights and environmental preservation. by Colleen Kaleda
Strange Fruit: Ohio Forestry, the Supreme Court and the Ripeness Doctrine. How a case on the Wayne National Forest in Ohio set a precedent for environmental law. by Cheri Brooks
Publisher's Note. Our 100 Years War. by Andy Stahl
When the Last Forest Researcher Retires, Will Someone Please Turn Out the Lights? For twenty years, U.S. Forest Research budgets have remained flat while overhead has grown with the economy. The result is a lot fewer researchers coring trees and counting owls. by Paul D. Thacker
Point of View. Outsourcing and the Alternatives. by Gifford Pinchot III

Fish biologist Rick Golden tries to bring perspective to management of the Ozark National Forest's streams. By Mark Blaine

Also:

Another Dry Year? Southwestern national forests have been pushed to the limit after a decade of drought. Now forest managers have tough decisions to make. by Jennifer Savage
The Shelton District: How a Community-Based Forestry Agreement Led to Ecological Ruin. How a supposedly sustainable logging program cut itself out of trees in a few decades. by Tim McNulty
Publisher's Note. Forest Temps. by Andy Stahl
Point of View. Forest Service: Simply a Job? by Guy W. Pence
Inner Voice. Skeleton Crew to Manage Forests. by Andy Stahl
The People's Prairie: Broad Horizons, Narrow Views. Far from being the biodiverse Eden described by Lewis and Clark, the Great Plains have, in two centuries, become little more than pasture. by Paul D. Thacker

A new tribal restoration project could return 692,000 acres of Oregon's Winema National Forest to its former owners—the Klamath Tribes. by Colleen Kaleda

Also:

A Prickly Issue. One man confronts the futility of bureaucracy in Idaho with a backpack sprayer and some verbal herbicide. by Brandon Lever
Restoration: A Plan. Watching Noah's ark work in reverse in the wild Yaak Valley of the Kootenai National Forest in Montana. by Rick Bass
Doc Smith's History Lesson. He came up through the big fires and now he has a story to tell about forests. They’re a mess. by Stephen Pyne

Two generations ago, the Tenth Mountain Division prepared for war at Camp Hale. Now it's a national forest with a dilemma: How do you remember history and restore ecosystems? By Allen Best

Also:

Never Too Rich, Never Too Thin. Thinning as a one-size-fits-all prescription for fire management in the west ignores the complexity of the problem in favor of public logging. by Mark Blaine
In Its Primal State: Chugach Forest Plan Tests the Definition of Wilderness. What is wilderness in wild Alaska? The Chugach National Forest feels the stress of use despite its vast protected acreage. by Kathie Durbin
A Thoughtful Fire Plan, A Political Hot Potato. A long-standing, liberal policy of letting some fires burn in the Bob Marshall Wilderness is paying off, returning balance to the natural fire regime. by Jim Mann

Caught between a shriveling economy and a withered resource, public land ranching is fading. Now greens are courting ranchers to reverse the damage caused by a failed federal promise. By Mark Blaine

Also:

“Welfare Ranching” by George Wuerthner is reviewed by Ed Marston, who says the book is driven by romanticism.
“Crossing the 100th Meridian” by Ed Marston is reviewed by George Wuerthner, who says the author is too invested in grazing to understand its consequences.
Picture Imperfect. Sometimes understanding the landscape takes a novel approach. One woman does it by analyzing dubiously pretty pictures on post cards. by Patricia Marshall
A Rancher's Decision. The cattle are gone. The ranch hasn't made any money for years. The family works off the ranch to earn a living. Is a federal buyout the solution? by Jamie Passaro
Drier & Drier. Forests have become progressively drier. For public land managers, this means tough decisions. by Mark Blaine
Where the Antelope Roam. George Reynolds retired from the U.S. Forest Service but couldn’t leave the land. He now works to return rangeland to antelope habitat in Oregon. by Patricia Marshall

print this page...
 

Forest Magazine

FOREST MAGAZINE
Conserving Our National Heritage

JOIN FSEEE
For readers who value our national forests for recreation, clean water, wildlife sanctuaries and spectacular wilderness.
Forest Magazine articles from FSEEE’s newsletter.
Forest Magazine articles about America's national forests.
Read the 1999 Forest Magazine investigation that examined the threat of forest fire at Los Alamos in depth.

Reader comments
Comments from readers are always welcome. Forest Magazine editors may be contacted by e-mail.

HOW TO CONTACT US
Editor
Patricia Marshall
patricia@fseee.org
  • Publisher
Andy Stahl
andy@fseee.org

Forest Magazine
P.O. Box 11646
Eugene, OR 97440
Phone (541) 484-3170
Fax (541) 484-3004
fseee@fseee.org

THE FINE PRINT
Forest Magazine is published by Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics, P.O. Box 11615, Eugene, OR 97440. The views expressed in Forest Magazine are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect FSEEE’s position or that of the Forest Service. Copyright © 2008 Forest Service Employees For Environmental Ethics.

Resources

Online Library

Download FSEEE's Guide to Free Speech and more.

 

Forest Service Information

Forest Service Directory
Forest Service Employee Email
Forest Service News Links

Your Representatives

U.S. Senate Contacts
U.S. House Contacts