>X-Sender: mayhem@shell4.ba.best.com >Date: Tue, 14 Jul 1998 15:26:19 -0800 >To: Headwaters Forest Coordinating Council <HFCC@lists.sanmateo.org> >From: Mark Bult <mark@enews.org> >Subject: LATimes OpEd by Hamburg >Sender: <HFCC@lists.sanmateo.org> >List-Software: LetterRip Pro 3.0.2b1 by Fog City Software, Inc. >List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:HFCC-off@lists.sanmateo.org> > >Los Angeles Times >Monday, July 13, 1998 > >Opinion > >No Headwaters Deal May Be Best Option >Redwoods: Legislators should take a long view before paying millions to a >Texas financier to preserve our ancient trees. > >By Dan Hamburg > >The fate of ancient redwoods in Northern California's Headwaters Forest has >become just a matter for horse-trading, as the state Legislature and the >governor grind out a budget. But for the future of the north coast, the >issue is critical. > >Many Democrats in Sacramento are lining up behind state Sen. Byron Sher >(D-Stanford), whose bill would add logging restrictions to the deal >negotiated in 1996 between Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and corporate >raider Charles Hurwitz, a Texan who took control of Pacific Lumber 12 years >ago. Gov. Pete Wilson and his Republican friends in the Legislature are the >main supporters of the Feinstein-Hurwitz deal. Sher claims that Hurwitz >will walk away from the table and fire up the chain saws if >environmentalists try to include additional environmental protections in >the legislation. Wilson and his allies (both Democrats and Republicans) are >anxious to reach an agreement. It helps that Hurwitz's timber political >action committee is one of the most generous in the state, contributing >$20,000 to Wilson's reelection campaign in 1994. > >There are many good reasons not to provide $130 million of state funding in >this year's budget for either the Feinstein-Hurwitz or the Sher deal. (The >state money, combined with $250 million in federal funds, would buy 7,500 >acres of virginold-growth redwoods in the Headwaters Forest.) Here are five >key considerations: > >* Completion of either deal will lead to the destruction of more ancient >redwoods and old-growth Douglas fir than if there were no deal. Under >current law, particularly the Endangered Species Act, Hurwitz can only log >small amounts of dead and downed wood in the areas of old-growth forests. > >The whole point of this deal, which would pay $380 million to Hurwitz, is >toallow his Pacific Lumber Co. to log in areas otherwise prohibited by law. >The first substantive clause of the Feinstein-Hurwitz deal states: "Pacific >Lumber desires to obtain a permit under section 10(a) of the Endangered >Species Act." Without this permit, which allows Hurwitz to harm or kill >endangered species, Hurwitz's chain saws are largely idled in areas of old >growth, but not on the rest of Pacific Lumber's 200,000-acre holdings. > >* Hurwitz wants the money and is not going to walk away from the table. >Although Hurwitz and Feinstein keep saying that if no deal happens this >year, no deal will ever happen, that's simply not the case. The value of >this deal to Hurwitz is so much greater than the value of the land under >existing laws and regulations that he and his lobbyists will continue to >work for a deal until he gets the money. > >* The state does not know what it's buying for $130 million. The federal >government is conducting an appraisal of the land to be acquired, at a cost >of more than $500,000, but it will not be completed until the fall. >Legislators are about to spend a very large sum of the public's money on >real estate whose value has yet to be determined. > >* Hurwitz played a central role in the failure of a savings and loan that >cost taxpayers $1.6 billion. Pending the resolution of charges against >Hurwitz by the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Federal Deposit >Insurance Corp., Hurwitz may owe taxpayers as much as $1 billion. Shouldn't >we wait to find out how these claims are going to be settled before >shoveling more public money to Hurwitz's holdings? > >* The Legislature forgot to require scientific peer review by an >independent scientific body, such as the National Academy of Sciences, in >its conditions for the Pacific Lumber's habitat conservation plan required >under the Feinstein-Hurwitz deal. Before spending such a huge chunk of >taxpayer money, shouldn't we be sure that the plan to protect endangered >species from extinction uses credible scientific standards? Otherwise, our >beleaguered salmon fishery will be destroyed even as the last 3% of our >ancient redwoods are felled. > >- - - >Dan Hamburg, a Former Democratic Member of Congress From Ukiah, Sponsored >the 1994 Headwaters Forest Act. He Is Executive Director of the Nonprofit >Vote Action Committee and the Green Party Candidate for Governor of >California. > > > > > David M. Walsh P.O. Box 903 Redway, CA 95560 Office and Fax(707) 923-3015 Home (707) 986-1644
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