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1989: Fish and
Wildlife Service Proposal to List the Spotted Owl as Threatened
In June of 1989, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (FWS) announced its opinion that the spotted owl should be placed
on the threatened list under the Endangered Species Act. This was a reversal from the agency's decision
the year before not to list the owl at all.
The FWS had one year to decide how to implement this action within
forest management plans, and there was a 90-day public comment period
directly following the announcement.
The FWS also scheduled several public question and answer hearings. The
timber industry reacted quickly to this announcement. Save Timber groups started in many places in the Pacific
Northwest. Towns united to fight the listing of the spotted owl, pleading
the FWS to take their jobs and families into account. Many logging companies responded with petitions, rallies, and protests,
claiming a "Threatened" listing for the spotted owl would cost
hundreds of thousands of jobs and would cause entire towns to shut down. Environmental groups claimed this number was
a huge exaggeration, and that only 1,000 jobs would be lost. Loggers protested by driving around towns with
trucks loaded with old growth timber.
The timber industry reported a dramatic increase in unemployment,
alcoholism, and child abuse due to all the legal injunctions and the possibility
that the spotted owl might soon be protected under the ESA. They claimed that information on the spotted
owl was inadequate for such an action.
In
July, Congress approved 13 million dollars for research on spotted owls.
Because of this, many biologists were sent into the woods to learn
more about spotted owl habitats and populations, and to help the FWS decide
how to manage the forests. One
result of this research showed that the bald eagle was also affected by
logging of old growth in Alaska. In
August, environmentalists began to ask the FWS to list a number of other
animal and plant species under the ESA, including a small sea-going bird,
the marbled murrelet. Throughout
the remainder of the year, most Pacific Northwest timber sales were halted
while the FWS decided what timber should and should not be sold, and how
to manage the forests as if the owl were protected under the ESA. At this time, timber industry workers suffered layoffs and mills
shut down as the timber supplies fell to unusual lows. Timber mill workers in Canada also grew worried,
as protests against logging old growth forests became increasingly common.
Canadians blamed the fight in the U.S. for this new trouble, and
said it was the reason that some of their loggers were losing jobs and
timber sales were being affected. More negotiations were set up between the timber industry and environmentalists to try to relieve the situation until a decision was made by the FWS how to proceed, but to no avail neither side could agree to a plan. So it was up to Congress to create an agreement for them. The proposals varied greatly, with some advocating a ban on suits to halt timber sales, and others working to halt logging altogether. A grouping of proposals called the Hatfield Amendments were designed to free up timber for logging and to curb the courts say in matters of old growth forest, but these amendments encountered strong opposition. Instead, in October of 1989, a milder compromise emerged with a one-year program to help minimize impacts on timber mills and logging towns, while also protecting some forests for spotted owl habitat. Meanwhile,
the FWS continued to work on how to best manage old growth forests.
Neither the environmental groups nor the
Northern Spotted Owl Newsclippings 1986 1989
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