Logging
Resumes on
Site of Oregon Fire
(AP) GRANTS
PASS, OR - Loggers went to work without interference Tuesday,
March 15th at the site of a 2002 forest fire, felling old-growth trees
after the U.S. Forest Service closed off the area to keep out protesters.
Citing safety concerns for
loggers and protesters alike, officials in the Siskiyou National Forest
on Monday closed the 700-acre area and roads leading to the timber sale.
Protesters had impeded loggers going to work.
Forest Service spokesman
Tom Lavagnino said a crew of loggers had no trouble getting to work
Tuesday, and rangers had not spotted a tree sitter who logging opponents
said was in a fir tree.
Protesters are trying to
stall the harvesting of trees killed by the fire in old-growth forest
reserves until federal judges can rule on two lawsuits challenging the
timber sales.
Forty-three arrests have
been made since a federal appeals court injunction barring the logging
was lifted March 7.
Tom Link, timber program
manager for the forest, said he was happy work could continue.
"We realize there is
a lot of litigation involved in this, and there are more decisions yet
to be made by the courts," Link said. "So we'll just continue
to do what the court directs us to do."
Also Tuesday, a federal
judge in Eugene denied the latest request from environmentalists to
halt the logging.
Judge Michael Hogan said
environmentalists had raised serious questions, including a suggestion
that the Forest Service did not properly ensure it was meeting its own
guidelines for preventing erosion and protecting fish and wildlife.
But the judge also said
the Silver Creek Timber Co. stood to lose $190,000 a week if logging
is halted, and contractors working for the company would lose $322,500
a week.
Meanwhile, three of 27 protesters
being held in the Josephine County Jail said they were on a hunger strike
to protest jail conditions and the criminal charges against them.
Sheriff's Lt. Howard Banks
said six inmates had filed grievances. He said he could not confirm
whether protesters claiming to be on a hunger strike were eating.