By ALANNA MADDEN/Courthouse News
After five years of litigation, conservation groups and the Oregon Department of Forestry reached an agreement last week to expand stream buffers within the Tillamook and Clatsop state forests to improve habitats for Oregon’s threatened coho salmon species.
The Center for Biological Diversity announced the settlement agreement Thursday. It had filed the original lawsuit against department officials alongside Cascadia Wildlands and Native Fish Society in 2018.
“For too long the timber industry has treated our state forests like cash cows, without enough protection for fish or water quality,” Amy Atwood, senior counsel at the center, said in a statement. “The protections provided by today’s agreement aren’t everything we want, but they’ll go a long way toward recovering coho salmon on Oregon’s North Coast.”
Under the settlement, the department agreed to make changes to its timber and forestry activities to expand all no-cut stream buffers from 25 feet to 120 feet and will include several non-fish bearing and seasonal reaches that previously received little protection. The state will also buffer areas on hills where landslides start and ensure that all trees damaged or felled from yarding activities are left in the buffer.
The center’s announcement also says the state will be required to inventory the road network in the Tillamook and Clatsop state forests within five years to identify problems and estimate costs to fix them.
Michael Wilson, state forests division chief for the Oregon Department of Forestry, said in an interview Friday that the settlement agreement was amicable and expressed relief that both parties came to agreeable terms for the benefit of salmon.
“We manage state forests for a variety of social, economic and environmental benefits. That includes providing and protecting habitats for native fish,” Wilson said. “The terms of this settlement work really well with our draft habitat conservation plan, which we anticipate will be implemented later this year.”
According to the 2018 federal lawsuit, the department’s logging activities and road maintenance within the Tillamook and Clatsop state forests have been harming threatened the coho salmon species in violation of the Endangered Species Act – particularly by hauling timber on roads in proximity to streams and logging steep slopes, causing landslides.
The Center for Biological Diversity said that when federal authorities listed Oregon’s coho salmon species as threatened based on the loss of freshwater habitat in 1998, it was due to several human activities.
The lawsuit calls it the consequence of “logging — in particular, clear-cutting trees on steep, unstable slopes and along debris flow paths — and road construction associated with log-hauling in the Oregon Coast range.”