Proposed Jefferson National Forest
timber sale delayed
Logging operation has been postponed while a district
ranger revises an environmental assessment of the project.
Kingsport Times/News
September 18, 2007
By CLIFFORD JEFFERY cjeffery@timesnews.net
DUNGANNON Residents are waiting for the next step in a
proposed logging project in the Jefferson National Forest.
The proposed timber sale, located on Dry Creek near Dungannon,
was first announced last year.
But the logging and burning of about 370 acres of wood in the
Jefferson National Forest has been postponed while District
Ranger Ron Bush of the Clinch Ranger District revises an
environmental assessment, according to The Clinch Coalition, a
group opposed to the project.
In August, Bush sent a letter to residents living near the site
stating that he was withdrawing the project and revising the
environmental assessment of the project.
The Forest Service has told members of the public that it
intends to proceed with the project but would provide an
additional 30-day period during which the public could raise
objections before the agency makes a new decision,
according to The Clinch Coalition.
Area residents and conservationists call for Ranger Bush to
use this time to step back, to significantly reduce the scope of
the project, and to fully address all of the serious concerns
raised by the public, including concerns about logging on steep
slopes, landslides, flooding, scarring the landscape from the
intensive, heavily concentrated logging and burning operations,
and the need for protecting the area for recreation, fishing and
hunting, and for protecting rare species downstream, said
Diana Withen, president of The Clinch Coalition.
In July, the coalition and residents of Dungannon filed an appeal
of the proposed logging plan. Residents said the many steep
slopes, if scarred by logging and burning, could result in
landslides and flooding.
Bush could not be reached for comment.