
The Karuk Tribe and conservation groups yesterday filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging a post-fire logging plan in the Klamath National Forest. The press release was issued just a day after federal and state fishery managers released data showing a low return of fall-run Chinook salmon on the Klamath River system this year and pointing to restrictions on the recreational, Tribal, and commercial fisheries this year. We must do everything we can to restore our imperiled salmon populations, including supporting Klamath River Dam removal and challenging timber management plans that harm fish and their habitat. Below is the news release from the Tribe and environmental groups.
Happy Camp, CA – On March 3, the Karuk Tribe, along with the Environmental Protection Information Center (EPIC), Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center (KS Wild), Center for Biological Diversity, and Klamath Riverkeeper, filed suit in federal court challenging a massive post-fire logging plan in Klamath National Forest that will increase fire danger, degrade water quality, and harm at-risk salmon populations.
The Tribe leads a diverse plaintiff group united by a common interest in restoring healthy relationships between people, fire, forests and fish. The groups seek to protect rural communities from fire risks, restore watershed health, and provide economic opportunities for locals.
The coalition is challenging a post-fire timber sale, the Westside Project, which fails rural river communities by implementing the same management practices that have for decades resulted in a landscape prone to dangerous fire events, degraded water quality, and contributed to declining salmon populations. The suit alleges the Klamath National Forest Plan, as approved by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries, illegally increases the risk of extinction for threatened populations of coho salmon.
The Westside project would clear-cut 5,760 acres on burned forest slopes above tributaries of the Klamath River. This aggressive approach would fail to resolve long-term fire management issues and exacerbate wildfire impacts to recovering watersheds. The steep and rugged terrain contains old-growth forests and nurtures some of the most important salmon habitat on the West Coast.
NOAA Fisheries is required to review Forest Service logging plans.