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Forest Service withdraws timber sale near St. Joe River basin
Staff Reports-
The Spokesman-Review, March 15, 2011
The U.S. Forest Service has withdrawn a timber sale near Clarkia, Idaho, that included clear-cuts in the St. Joe River basin.
The Bussel 484 sale will be reissued with additional analysis on how
the timber harvest would affect pileated woodpeckers, northern goshawks
and other indicator species for old-growth habitat, said Jason
Kirchner, a spokesman for the Idaho Panhandle National Forests.
The 2,100-acre sale was challenged by The Lands Council of Spokane.
In August, a federal court ruling halted the sale. The Forest Service
had appealed that decision in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals but opted
to drop the appeal Friday based on a recent court ruling in Montana,
Kirchner said. In the Montana ruling, the Forest Service was ordered to
reassess grazing plans for 48,000 acres in southwest Montana to better
describe effects on wildlife.
Forest Service officials said the Bussel 484 sale's timber harvest
would have mimicked natural wildfires. In court documents, The Lands
Council argued that the agency failed to assess the timber sale's effect
on animals that use old-growth habitat.
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