NATURE NEXT DOOR: PROTECTING SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA’S FOUR NATIONAL FORESTS
Southern California’s four national forests – the Angeles, Cleveland, Los Padres, and San Bernardino — comprise a beautiful tapestry of landscapes and ecosystems that host an enormous variety of native wildlife and plants. Stretching across more than 3.5 million acres, the four national forests not only provide enjoyment for California residents and visitors — they also support 76 threatened and endangered species and 405 at-risk species in need special protective care. Surrounded by a sea of urban development, many Southern California plants and animals are finding the four national forests to be their last refuge.
Yet the true value of the national forests seems to have gone unrecognized by the U.S. Forest Service. Grazing, oil and gas drilling, logging, road construction, transmission lines, off-road vehicle use, and poor fire-management activities are just a few of the threats the Forest Service has not only failed to address, but often encouraged.
The agency’s long-awaited land-management plans for the forests, released in 2005 and outlining management goals and strategies for the next 10 to 15 years, are meant to guide decisions on everything from protecting plants and wildlife and providing recreational opportunities to deciding where development and off-road vehicle trails can be placed. But these plans are fundamentally flawed, ultimately failing to protect important forest natural values.
OUR CAMPAIGN
The Center has worked to protect the four Southern California national forests since 1998, when we filed a lawsuit that resulted in a landmark settlement requiring the Forest Service to update its forest management plans for the good of imperiled species. Between 2001 and 2005, we and our partners watched over Forest Service revisions to the management plans and pressed for stronger environmental protections, including the development of a comprehensive, scientifically based Conservation Alternative outlining visionary standards and guidelines for management that would continue to provide world-class recreational opportunities while offering new ways to protect the forests’ rich array of flora and fauna. Our Conservation Alternative became Alternative 6 in the Forest Service’s environmental impact statement for the management plans, and in May 2005, we submitted a report identifying the forests’ biodiversity hotspots, recommending that these unique areas be designated “critical biological zones” with high levels of protection.
Since the Forest Service’s management plans fell far short of addressing the problems facing the forests, the Center led an appeal of the plans in 2006, and despite the Forest Service’s resistance, a judge ordered that the agency accept and review our appeal. Unfortunately, the appeal was rejected in 2008 in a move destined to harm all four forests — but the fight for their protection isn’t over. We filed suit against the Forest Service in August 2008 on behalf of the forests’ wildlife and ecosystems.
We've also led a lawsuit against the Forest Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Marine Fisheries Service over their failure to protect federally listed species and designated critical habitat. The suit challenges the validity of “biological opinions” on the revised forest plans, which were prepared by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service. These documents acknowledge that the revised forest plans will result in adverse impacts to many threatened and endangered species that reside on the four forests, but fail to identify the actual extent of these impacts or provide meaningful ways to reduce them — as the Endangered Species Act (and common sense) require.
Through our campaign, we’re determined to bring national forest management into the 21st century to ensure that it follows scientific recommendations to preserve biodiversity and opportunities for quiet human recreation. Our main goals in moving forward include preparing a scientific report and engaging in public outreach regarding vegetation management for fire, advocating for old-growth forests and chaparral, opposing destructive oil and gas development, and working to protect the threatened and endangered species that call these forests home.
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