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Indybay Feature

Public Interest Groups Petition State Water Board for Stay

by press release
Public interest groups seek emergency stay on Regional Water Board decision to allow Pacific Lumber logging in impaired areas.
A coalition of public interest groups announced today that they have filed a petition with the State Water Resources Control Board for an immediate emergency stay of the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board’s (RWB’s) action of March 16, 2005 to provide permit coverage for 74% of the Pacific Lumber Company’s timber harvest plans in the Elk River and Freshwater watersheds.

The petition was filed by the Humboldt Watershed Council, the Environmental Protection Information Center, and the Sierra Club, who believe that the RWB’s action is a violation of the public trust. The petition states that the Regional Board’s permitting of these plans was arbitrary and capricious, was made without any basis, is contrary to the administrative record for these watersheds, is unenforceable, violates the CEQA mandated process for public review, and is in direct conflict with the terms of the RWB’s General Waste Discharge Requirements (the permit used by the Board).

For a stay to be granted, the petitioners must show three things:

· substantial harm to petitioner or to the public interest if a stay is not granted,

· a lack of substantial harm to other interested persons and to the public interest if a stay is granted and

· substantial questions of fact or law regarding the disputed action.

It has been well established and accepted as fact by both PL and the Regional Board that PL’s practices have harmed the residents of these watersheds. At the RWB hearing on March 16, 2005, the members and staff of the Regional Water Board, as well as representatives of the Pacific Lumber Company, all acknowledged the impaired condition of the watersheds and its impact upon the residents who live there.

Prior to the Board’s action, RWB staff had imposed limits on PL’s logging activity in these watersheds which were based upon well-established science and were designed to give Pacific Lumber the maximum possible timber harvest in these watersheds which would still allow meaningful recovery and, thus, relief for the residents. The Board’s action amounts to an increase of 50% above the rate which will allow for recovery. By arbitrarily and capriciously over-ruling their staff, the Board’s action not only fails to relieve existing and ongoing harm, but rather forces the residents of these watersheds to suffer new harm which would not otherwise exist.

In Freshwater and Elk River there are an estimated 250 properties and 592 residents who are either impacted or trapped by flooding numerous times each year. Over a 20 year recovery timeframe, the Board’s decision could cause these residents to suffer $576,000 in lost work alone. Future property damage to homes, foundations, driveways, fences, septic systems, wells, furniture, vehicles, and livestock could easily exceed $2,000,000. All together, the future damages to residents from the Board’s action could add up to over $3,000,000 before recovery is attained.

The granting of a stay would not cause any harm to Pacific Lumber. The company’s own documents show that they are logging at exactly their planned rate for this decade (162million board feet per year), and that their current financial mess predates any reduction in their harvest by the Regional Water Board. Clearly PL’s problems were not caused by the RWB, and the Board has neither the ability nor the responsibility to fix them.

At the March 16, 2005 hearing PL representative Jared Carter testified under oath that the 75% enrollment would make no difference in the company’s ability to stay in business “more than a matter of weeks”. PL’s threat of looming bankruptcy greatly increases the likely harm to residents, as there is no way to ensure that any of the mitigations on these THPs will ever happen. Therefore, it must be assumed that the harm from these THPs will be unmitigated. The harm is real. The mitigations are not.

The Board’s decision was arbitrary by any measure. Board Member John Corbett proposed that the Board direct staff to enroll additional THPs up to 75% of the CDF allowance. At no time was the Board presented with any evidence to support a recovery curve based on this 75% rate, nor was there any discussion among the Board as to the effects of such a rate. In fact, the only basis given by Mr. Corbett for choosing the 75% figure was “…it’s minus 25%.”

After Mr. Corbett presented the 75% figure, Board Member Lyle Marshall cautioned his fellow Board Members that “I can’t vote to pick an arbitrary percentage out of the air”. Marshall voted against the motion, along with Board Members Richard Grundy and Bev Wasson.

The Board’s motion included a number proposed mitigations which had been offered by PL, but these proposals were not made available to the public in advance of the meeting. Most members of the public never saw this list of proposals until after the Board's decision was made.

The Regional Board’s use of the GWDR (order R1-2004-0030) in watersheds where cumulative effects are present is prohibited under sections III.C.1, V.A.4 and V.A.5, yet it is being justified by adding these additional mitigations which miraculously make cumulative impacts go away. Given this near-magical significance, their addition into the GWDR would require public notice, circulation, and review before adoption. This has not happened and, therefore, the CEQA process has been improperly circumvented.

The granting of this stay would protect the residents of the watersheds, and would be in the public interest, while not harming PL in any otherwise preventable way. Failure to grant the stay, on the other hand, will cause new harm to the health, safety, property, and liberty of the residents of the watersheds. The granting of this stay is supported by ample evidence in the administrative record, and by substantial questions of law. The balance of harm in this case thus overwhelmingly compels the granting an immediate emergency stay.
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by concerned resident
OK you have finally made me mad enough to write something. Hopefully someone will listen to some truth. My family have owned and lived in the Elk River Valley for over 100 years. We are now in our third generation working the same land as our forefathers. We have had logging and ranching in this valley for many years and have survived many natural disasters including flooding. Why do you think these alluvial flats make such good farm and ranch land ? How do you think it was formed over the hundreds of years ? Why do you think the old settlers built their hose on a hill ? Why do you think you have to drive up to the bridges to cross the main channel ? Because of many many floods. Our ancestors figured that out long ago. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure that one. How can you come up with such ludicrous numbers like how many people will impacted or trapped by flooding, 592 ? where did that number come from ?? Nobody talked to me. 576,000 dollars in lost wages ? where in the world did that number come from ? Different people make different money. Again nobody asked me. Trying to lay a guilt trip on the Water Board for their pass decision is a cheap shot to say the least. It appears to me only a small handful of people ( some who don't even live in the watershed ) are trying to create problems and cause trouble for the rest of us. We don't need anymore problems with the economic stability of our way of life as we know it. This is our property and we intend to continue to fight for our way of life. Logging has not caused the problems we are facing today. People have and continue to stir the pot that they know nothing about. We do not need any help from the Watershed Council, EPIC or the Sierra Club. We need to come together as a community and educate each other about how nature works in this valley and what could be done, if anything, to help our cause. And this means working with the timber industry who have been the main stay of our community for many years. So you long haired, pony tailed hippies please butt out of our community and take the few people you have brainwashed with you. Try to back-up your claims with solid evidence if you want someone to believe you. Don't insult me or my family with your false information since we have lived here and watched this watershed long before you were born. Find a job you can take pride in and not hurt those of us who have fought and taken care of this watershed for so many years. Please leave us alone. We don't need your help. Thank-you.
by Wolverine
"My family have owned and lived in the Elk River Valley for over 100 years." So what? The native people were there for thousands of years before they were chased out by your people. Native people rarely, if ever, killed trees.

"We are now in our third generation working the same land as our forefathers. We have had logging and ranching..." You are destroying the same land. Logging is immoral (you shouldn't kill anything you don't eat, and you don't eat trees) and environmentally destructive, as is cattle grazing in the west.

"This is our property and we intend to continue to fight for our way of life." "Your" property was stolen from the natives after murdering them. You and your ancestors then made money by destroying the land (logging and ranching).

"So you long haired, pony tailed hippies please butt out of our community and take the few people you have brainwashed with you." I've got a better idea. Go back to Europe where white people belong and quit destroying Turtle Island! People like you are nothing but criminals.
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