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2008/12/02

EcoGeek and The Wilderness Society say No to Clearcuts

A Note to EcoGeek Readers:

This is the first time we are sending anything to this email list that is not an EcoGeek newsletter and, as such, wanted to introduce it. The following is a broadcast from the Wilderness Society, an organization that I have worked with several times in the past, and believe strongly in. The broadcast is being sent as part of EcoGeek's strategy to both increase revenue, and increase our participation in the broader discussion of environmental policy in America today.

Please note that I am interested what you all think about this, and so I have put a poll online. If you would like to make your views about this known, please participate in the poll, and / or leave a comment on the post.

 

Dear EcoGeek Readers,

Wholesale clearcuts in Oregon's ancient forests?

Say NO to the Bush Administration's long term plans for these important forests.

Click here to take action!

The election is over, but the risk of corporate giveaways by an outgoing Bush Administration has never been greater.

In fact, the Bush Administration is rushing out long-term plans that would convert the ancient forests of western Oregon, with their towering trees, rushing rivers, and superb wildlife habitat, to empty clearcuts.

Under these plans, logging our public forests would dramatically increase, more than tripling the current level. More than a thousand miles of damaging logging roads would be built within the forests.

Let them know we're watching. Say NO to the Bush Administration's attempt to sell off some of our last ancient forests to the timber industry.

What's at stake? More than two million acres that contain some of America's few remaining ancient forests. Some 20,000 miles of rivers, where wild Pacific salmon thrive. Ancient forests that are home to huge Douglas fir, western hemlocks and western red cedar trees—some well over 400 years old. This wet, rugged environment also provides rich habitat for wildlife like elk, deer, black bear and Pacific fishers, as well as endangered species such as spotted owls and marbled murrelets.

These forests gain more importance each day as buffers against the impacts of global warming. That's just one of the many reasons why logging activities should focus on smaller trees—and always with restoration and fire protection in mind.

We can't let this happen. Click here to tell the Bush Administration their plans are wholly unacceptable.

Thanks for all you do,

Kathy Kilmer
The Wilderness Society



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