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White House inadvertently texted top-secret Yemen war plans to journalist; MS egg prices stay high amid industry consolidation; NM native, others remembered on National Medal of Honor Day; IN inches closer to lifesaving law change.

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President Trump credits tariffs for a Hyundai Steel investment in Louisiana, but residents say the governor is betraying them over health concerns there; and other states double down on climate change as the Trump administration rolls back environmental regulations.

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Cuts to Medicaid and frozen funding for broadband are both likely to have a negative impact on rural healthcare, which is already struggling. Plus, lawsuits over the mass firing of federal workers have huge implications for public lands.

U.S. Forest Service ditches amendment to protect OR old growth forests

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Wednesday, January 29, 2025   

Earlier this month, the U.S. Forest Service announced it would not be following through with the National Old Growth Amendment, which would have protected some of Oregon's iconic old-growth trees.

The amendment was the result of a Biden administration order to tally old-growth forests on federal lands and make a plan to protect them from climate-based threats.

For Brenna Bell, forest climate manager at 350PDX, pulling the plug may have been for the best. While acknowledging the amendment offered protections, Bell said there were too many loopholes.

"Old trees still would have been logged, except people might have believed that it was protected," she said. "So, not having it, so people don't have that false sense of protection, might be a good thing."

The amendment would have prohibited commercial logging on about 25 million acres of old-growth forests. Bell added that since the amendment would most likely have been repealed under the Trump administration, withdrawing now allows for the possibility of stronger legislation down the road.

Contrary to what many people may believe, Bell said, old-growth forests in the Northwest continue to be logged. She explained that federal timber targets drive logging on national forest land, pushing forests to meet volume quotas. While most logged trees are smaller second growth, she added, there's always pressure to cut large trees to meet targets faster.

Bell suggested eliminating timber targets to better protect old-growth forests.

"If we could just make it so trees could be logged a.) to meet the local timber demand or b.) to have restoration purposes," she said, "but not because of some arbitrary target that is set in Washington, D.C., and then just distributed to all of the different forests."

The Trump administration will most likely increase timber targets, said Bell, regardless of whether there is local demand. Reports show the Biden administration allowed the Bureau of Land Management to cut old-growth trees at a faster rate than the previous decade.

Old-growth forests in Oregon's Coast Range absorb and store more carbon per acre than almost any other forest in the world.


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