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Show MOUNTAIN TIMES Continued from page 10 511,000-acre recommendation. In 1983, 50 mpnrr® the Utah Wilderness Association succeeded in pushing Utah representato introduce a Utah Wilderness Bill in Congress. Emerging in 1984 was a 460,000-acre federally protected High Uinta Wilderness. ys zs ‘ : ; \ ‘Liquidating Old Growth Forest Although smaller than the Forest . So fe es ; % Service recommendation, the creation of the High Uintas Wilderness marked a major wilderness stepping-stone. Yet the task of protecting the remaining “ ey . 5 ey, bee & b a i hee >, “Hy, oe” LEGEND 77\, Roadless Area development. A The Uintas had been “tie-hacked” — very where all but old the trees were very young logged Roadless Area Timber Proposal on Past Clearcut Areas and for rail- A oililand Gas Cais roads. Still, Uinta timber harvests did not surface as an issue until the 1950s. By the 1970s extensive harvesting was “Roaaless T o Oil Freld occurring in the area. At the same time, considerable impacts interest of was timber brewing on cutting on “ap shows past clear-cuts Tea oilFee wildlife and recreation. pole Commissioned by the Utah Wilderness Association in the mid-’80s, the Cascade Holistic Economic Consultants prepared a report showing the Ashiey National Forest overestimated its volume of timber and that within three decades all old-growth lodge- area would be liquidated. Systematic over-harvesting had become the norm. But eventually, the Forest proWasatch-Cache National posed to reduce the timber harvest by over 50 percent because of growing watersheds, concerns for wildlife, pine outside chien of the wilderness Map by Margaret Pettis around wilderness area roadless wilderness values, outdated timber inventories, regeneration difficulties and a host of other small, but cumulatively meaningful, problems New Law OKs Clear-cuts But at this critical juncture, new legislaticn cleared the way for more forest decimation. Hiding behind the | metaphorically incorrect concept of “forest health,” the Forest Service, Congress, and unfortunately, President Clinton, approved the Emergency Salvage Timber Sale Program to last through 1996. A so-called “salvage Continued on page 12 res? TH ~ %e, © s°, 2 24 Wye 4? ee" a eee Ue TU MRA C Re OR Cae aera ACCC Ce Rea eae ea Pr’ ea RC o®* 4 during™ we o*? re delicious) deal. ite & Blueber Bagel with any purchase. e rae one coupon per visit. Coupon is not mable with any other coupon or special Stee (duh). No reproductions allowed. Cash redemption value 1/20th of one cent (don’t quit your day job). Applicable taxes Perha oF a) >Ss 2 s ° 3 SraN bh xX =3 “ o = xe € hes tbagels. Park City 11 1890 Bonanza Drive, Park City. (64 6 isihe) PAGE paid by bearer (that’s you). Valid only :, a 1890 Bonanza Drive 801 -645-8489 — Pies wiener Vini, vidi, s o < 2 >s = = ps the world’s bro 3s, Bagels, Inc: oli Einstein the 5) vce Yona eR ~" 90" ee + he US Forest Service policies of logging and energy SB a Aa oo as \ Ke All eines ef A Nae | this Wilderness protects the lower forest basins, provides protection for entire roadless watersheds, and focuses on preservation of biological systems, it is fraying at the edges under age eee me gee wildlands is far from complete. While ih . ° 6 Gm, : “einstein ew ace 103 Crys ©1996 Einstein Bros, Bagels, Inc tives : Taye we |