Judge blocks Montana from logging in
grizzly territory
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[August 23, 2014]
By Laura Zuckerman
(Reuters) - Conservation groups on Friday
hailed a court decision that blocks Montana from building roads and
logging in nearly 37,000 acres of a state forest that serves as core
habitat for protected grizzly bears.
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A federal judge ruled on Thursday that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service violated the Endangered Species Act by issuing a permit to
Montana allowing it to open the Stillwater State Forest to timber
harvests in areas that would damage grizzly territory.
Grizzly bears were classified in 1975 as threatened in the
continental United States after nearing extinction from hunting,
trapping and poisoning.
Just five populations of the hump-shouldered bruins are found in the
Lower 48 states, including roughly 1,000 grizzlies along the
northern Continental Divide in Montana, and an estimated 600 in and
around Yellowstone National Park in the northern Rockies.
Federal protections make it broadly illegal to injure or kill
grizzlies, or to harm them by destroying designated habitat without
a special permit.
It is the population along the Continental Divide that is at stake
in the legal case brought against logging proposals in the
Stillwater State Forest, in northwestern Montana.
Tim Preso, attorney for the environmental law firm Earthjustice,
said grizzlies have made a comeback in that region thanks chiefly to
habitat protections that curb human activities such as logging.
“Now is not the time to pull back. We need to keep that population
of grizzlies secure for the future,” he said.
The Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation argued
in the legal case that its plan to build roads and harvest trees
would have minimal impact on grizzlies because it called for logging
of small areas at different times rather than a full-scale clearing
operation.
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Profits from the proposed logging were to benefit public schools,
said an agency administrator, Shawn Thomas.
The Obama administration has indicated it will seek to strip
grizzlies of federal safeguards in areas where they are thriving,
including the northern Continental Divide and Yellowstone.
In the same ruling, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy declined to
block plans for roads and logging in two other Montana forests tied
to conservationists’ claims they would harm imperiled bull trout.
Fish and Wildlife Service spokesman Gavin Shire said the judge’s
decision on trout shows that plans hammered out by state and federal
officials can benefit threatened species while allowing “a working
conservation landscape” in Montana.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman in Salmon, Idaho; Editing by Steve
Gorman and Mohammad Zargham)
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