Forest Service officials knowingly used faulty data of spotted owl
habitat to block logging in a California forest, according to court documents
obtained by The Washington Times.
The Forest Service did not have a "rational basis" for halting the timber
sale to Wetsel-Oviatt Lumber Company, said the previously undisclosed ruling by
Federal Claims Court Judge Lawrence S. Margolis.
The timber company's lawyer, Gary Stevens, called the Forest Service data
"junk science."
The revelation of bad science comes on the heels of other questionable
actions taken by federal officials in the name of protecting endangered species.
False samples were submitted into a national lynx survey, and in other
cases faulty information was used to cut off water to farmers and to establish
habitat in several states for endangered fish species.
Compensating lumber companies for this and 30 other California timber sales
canceled in the 1990s because of the spotted owl already has cost the government
$15 million, according to a Forest Service document.
In addition, the federal government agreed last week to pay Wetsel-Oviatt
$9.5 million for four canceled timber sales. So far the Bald Mountain timber bid
is the only case taken to trial.
Judge Margolis ruled the Forest Service action was "arbitrary, capricious
and without rational basis." He also found that the officials knew their
findings were faulty when they ordered the sale canceled.
"The Forest Service therefore breached its contractual obligation to fairly
and honestly consider Wetsel's bid on the sale," he said after the four-day
trial in 1998.
Two Forest Service scientists used aerial and satellite photographs to
identify old-growth trees. That indicated a "disturbance index" for spotted owl
habitat — meaning logging in 5 percent of the proposed sale area would affect
the owl's habitat. But the scientists did not verify their findings with a
ground inspection.
Two reviews of the findings — one by a private contractor and another by
the government — said the analysis was unreliable, but the timber sales were
canceled nonetheless.
Ecologist Jo Ann Fites-Kaufman was asked during the trial if she believed
her assessment was valid. "I believe that I attempted to conduct a valid
accuracy assessment, but my understanding since the time that I did that is it
probably wasn't an appropriate method to use," Mrs. Fites-Kaufman responded.
Previously, a government witness and leading expert on the California
spotted owl, Gerry Verner, testified the study was sound. "I came away with the
strong impression that it was, in fact, within my gestalt notion of what
suitable nesting habitat is after having walked through dozens of places like
this throughout the Sierra Nevada and in other parts of the owl's distribution
throughout the West," Mr. Verner said.
As he drove through the forest, Mr. Verner said, "I had the feeling I was
never outside a stone's throw of suitable foraging habitat at least."
"I said to a couple of fellows there, 'If there's not a pair of spotted
owls occupying this site, I'll spring for a Chateaubriand for two.' I was that
convinced that there's a pair of owls in there that has not, at this point, been
detected yet," Mr. Verner said.
Mr. Stevens, who represented Wetsel-Oviatt in the case, said the Forest
Service bowed to pressure from environmental groups and used the same erroneous
data to cancel the company's other four timber sales.
Other questionable actions have been taken by federal officials in the name
of protecting endangered species.
Last week, two federal investigations harshly criticized scientists for
submitting false samples into a national lynx survey, although the federal
government has declined to prosecute or fire the biologists.
On Monday, the National Marine Fisheries Service agreed to rescind
critical-habitat designations for 19 West Coast salmon and steelhead populations
in a court case brought by home builders who said the decision was based on bad
science.
The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) brought the suit in U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia and produced a "smoking gun" memo
that said no analysis of habitat was ever performed "because we lack
information."
"When we make critical habitat designations, we just designate everything
as critical, without an analysis of how much habitat" is needed for salmon
population, said the 1998 memo written by a high-level government official.
The designation challenged by NAHB was for a geographic region encompassing
150 watersheds, river segments, bays and estuaries throughout Washington state,
Oregon, California and Idaho.
The House Resources Committee is holding a series of hearings on the misuse
of science in enforcing the Endangered Species Act (ESA). On March 20, the
committee will review legislation to amend the act.
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