A story about the timber industry in the newly launched South Dakota Searchlight dovetails with a piece by Tony Kennedy in last weekend's Star Tribune's On Minnesota's DNR hunting lands, intensified logging rattles wildlife managers.
In Minnesota, "boards and cords" are up on state land:
. . . The shift to intensified logging on state land started in 2018 with the Sustainable Timber Harvest initiative, a public-private pact between DNR and the forest products industry whereby the state agreed to increase and stabilize timber availability at the urging of timber producers. Selling timber on state lands is part of the DNR Forestry Division's mission. But the push for more wood has stirred infighting between DNR wildlife field staff and agency executives charged with administering the logging plan.
At the midpoint of the 10-year program, the DNR is offering 870,000 cords per year of merchantable timber, up from 800,000 cords . . .
Critics of the intensified logging plan say it takes control of the ax away from local wildlife managers on the 23% of Minnesota forest acres owned by the state and managed by the DNR Forestry and Fish and Wildlife divisions.
But sometime federal authorities step in:
Yet the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, a federal agency, last year banned the DNR from touching trees on 86,000 acres of wildlife lands Up North. The so-called Land Utilization Program (LUP) acres — established in 1942 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt — are in the sustainable timber harvest pool as part of Red Lake WMA. . . .
The South Dakota Searchlight article focuses on the federal Black Hills National Forest, where a need for balance between logging and sustaining the resource also exist.
In Black Hills timber sales fall 20 percent, Seth Tupper reports:
Timber sales in the Black Hills National Forest have declined sharply, prompting praise and condemnation.
The national forest’s advisory board met recently in Rapid City, where Forest Supervisor Jeff Tomac shared figures from the 2022 fiscal year that ended Sept. 30.
Timber sales in the forest totaled 112,874 CCF, Tomac said – down 20 percent from the prior year, and the lowest number since 2003. In the vernacular of the Forest Service, 1 “CCF” is 100 cubic feet of timber (the first “c” is for the Roman numeral 100).
“It’s a significant difference,” Tomac said, comparing the number to prior years.
In the audience at the board meeting was Dave Mertz, a retired natural resources staff officer for the forest. He said afterward that it takes 8 or 9 CCF to fill a double-trailer logging truck, which means the amount of timber sold during the last fiscal year would still fill more than 12,000 truckloads. Companies win the right to cut trees in the forest by placing bids in Forest Service timber sales.
Mertz is part of a coalition of former Forest Service employees, environmentalists and conservationists that has argued for a reduction in timber harvests.
“I think it’s going in the right direction,” Mertz said after the meeting.
The Black Hills National Forest Advisory Board consists of 16 members with diverse interests. Paul Pierson is the board chairman, representing the forest products industry. He’s also an operations manager for Neiman Enterprises, which owns the Black Hills’ two largest sawmills in Spearfish and Hulett, Wyoming.
The company closed its Hill City sawmill last year and eliminated 120 jobs, citing an insufficient timber supply. The company also reduced hours in July at its Spearfish and Hulett sawmills, and eliminated a shift in Hulett. Pierson said during the board meeting that more cutbacks are imminent.
“At this level of a sale program, and with the future levels that have been talked about, we’re within months of losing more capacity,” Pierson said.
He did not respond to a request for further comment.
Pine beetle infestations, wildfires and years of aggressive logging have drastically altered the forest during the past few decades, according to a scientific report finalized last year by Forest Service researchers. The report says continued logging at higher rates could eventually deplete the forest of harvestable trees – a finding disputed by the timber industry.
Tomac, the forest supervisor, said regional Forest Service managers did not give him a timber-sale target last year, but he expects to receive one this year.
But Mertz said local Forest Service employees are unlikely to meet any higher target mandated by regional managers.
“If they come with some big number and say, ‘We want you to do this,’ well, they just don’t have the capacity and the trees out there to do that,” Mertz said.
At stake is the long-term health of the forest. Because of modern firefighting efforts, wildfires no longer play their natural role in thinning tree stands. Wildfires and beetle infestations are more severe in a dense forest, so nearly everyone involved in the Black Hills timber debate agrees that some level of logging is necessary.
Mertz said loggers and sawmill operators need to reduce harvests for their own good, so they don’t deplete the resource they depend on. Even if one of the major sawmills closes, he said, the other major sawmill and smaller operators are sufficient to help manage the forest.
Pierson disagrees. During the advisory board meeting, the operations manager for Neiman Enterprises said sawmill operators need more timber to sustain their businesses.
“We’re in danger of losing our ability to help manage this forest,” Pierson said.
Photo: A timber project in the Black Hills National Forest. (Courtesy of U.S. Forest Service/via South Dakota Searchlight.
A sister site to the Minnesota Reformer, South Dakota Searchlight is an affiliate of States Newsroom. This article is republished online under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
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