Brand New “Biggest Logging Project in Colorado History” Brings Total to Half-Million Acres and Seventeen Roadless Areas

This week, the U.S. Forest Service proposed what is now the largest public land logging scheme of the century (and possibly history) in Colorado, “Pike’s Peak Vegetation Management,”194,567 acres of industrial logging—13,500 acres within four protected Roadless Areas—and  244,210 acres of toxic herbicide spraying in the Pike and San Isabel National Forests in El Paso, Teller, and Douglas Counties.

The federal land management agency appears to have been emboldened by a multi-year media blackout across all of Colorado on what, up to this point, were successively the three largest logging projects in state history, to propose a fourth, even larger and more destructive one with the public kept almost completely in the dark.  

“The Forest Service is proposing a huge project that will likely have detrimental impacts on important resources, including four Roadless Areas and three wildlife species listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act,” says Denver-based forest management consultant Rocky Smith, building on his more than forty years’ experience. “They provide only general information on which to respond to the proposal and give us only fourteen days to do so. This is not the way to manage the public’s forests.”

Currently, these “Big Four” logging schemes total almost half a million acres (474,872) of National Forests along the entire length of Colorado’s Front Range Rocky Mountains in seven counties, including 61,439 acres across seventeen Roadless Areas. All logging projects include clearcutting, as well as logging in endangered species habitat and old-growth forests.

The imminent “Lower North South Vegetation Management” in the Pike National Forest 30 miles southwest of Denver in Jefferson, Douglas, Park, and El Paso Counties involves 116,600 acres of public lands logging, including 18,573 acres across seven Roadless Areas.

The recently begun “Black Diamond” in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests in Larimer County, involves 120,455 acres of public lands logging, including 21,503 acres across four Roadless Areas.

The ongoing “St. Vrain” in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests in Boulder and Larimer Counties, involves 43,250 acres of public lands logging, including 7,863 acres across two Roadless Areas.

Pike’s Peak and Lower North South are being rushed through under a controversial, scientifically-debunked federal “emergency authorization” that has been expanded to 112 million acres—59 percent of National Forests—weeks after Trump’s executive order for expanding timber production on public lands. This logging coincides with the Forest Service’s rollback of the historic “Roadless Rule” across 60 million acres and U.S. Senator Hickenlooper’s introduction of the Orwellian “Fix Our Forests” logging bill into the Senate.

The Forest Service is giving the public less than two weeks to comment on the Pike’s Peak project during the holiday season, expecting as in the past, that zero Colorado media outlets will report on the logging and, therefore, almost no Coloradans will get the chance to engage in participatory democracy on the biggest threat the state has ever seen on public lands.  

Contrary to a industry/government disinformation campaign, the agency’s main talking points for such supposed “fuel reduction” logging—“community protection” and “reduction” of high-severity wildfire—are debunked by the consensus body of peer-reviewed science, as well as the Forest Service’s own studies, with the conflict privately admitted to even by Colorado Forest Restoration Institute, which promotes and carries out “fuel reduction” logging. To the contrary, studies show logging more likely to threaten homes and lives by spreading fires to communities after drying out and heating up forests and opening them to wind.

Published by eco-integrityalliance

The mission of Eco-Integrity Alliance is to unite the grassroots environmental movement through common campaigns of mutual support.

3 thoughts on “Brand New “Biggest Logging Project in Colorado History” Brings Total to Half-Million Acres and Seventeen Roadless Areas

  1. In the 1980s I told fellow Earth First!ers that even if we could get all of the unspoiled land designated National Park wilderness — the strongest legal protection of land and the nonhumans there in the U.S. — if people really wanted the resources in those areas, they’d take them, by force and/or by pretext. Now they’re building roads and logging in wilderness, our ultimate nightmare regarding this.

    My point here is that the root of the problem is human attitudes and feelings toward the natural world, which are in turn caused by lack of mental and spiritual evolution. If human priorities continue to be making ourselves comfortable at the expense of the Earth and the nonhumans here, then behavior like this will continue. I don’t know how, but we have to find a way to get people to evolve so that they stop feeling antipathy or even apathy for the natural world, and instead love it beyond all else. Any other solutions are temporary at best.

    Jeff Hoffman

    Berkeley, CA

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    1. We 100% agree that deeper level change–rekindling the connection between humanity and the natural world–is essential for any of this to turn around. It’s central to EIA’s Guiding Principles and discuss that frequently on the Green Root Podcast.

      Unfortunately, while we must be moving that forward, we can’t really wait for humans to evolve as our last ecosystems are devastated. So, we see this as an “all tools in the toolbox” approach. Each of us might focus on a different piece, the key being that we are all on the same page with the various tactics so we can be walking in unison towards a common goal.

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      1. I totally agree. I’m not at all saying that we shouldn’t take immediate action to stop immediate harms, but we ultimately have to do a lot more than that.

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