Oregon groups back Mount Hood wilderness expansion

4/5/2006, 4:37 p.m. PT

By MATTHEW DALY

The Associated Press

 

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Groups from across Oregon largely supported a bill Wednesday to create 77,500 acres of new wilderness in the Mount Hood National Forest.

But a representative of a lumber company that employs more than 300 people near the mountain said the bill sets aside too much land as wilderness.

Oregon Reps. Greg Walden and Earl Blumenauer sponsored the bill, which would expand the amount of wilderness _the most restrictive of federal land designations — on the mountain by more than 40 percent. The bill would be the first new wilderness in the 1.1 million acre forest since 1984.

Speakers praised Walden, a Republican, and Blumenauer, a Democrat, for working together on the proposed wilderness — a process that often proves contentious because of its severe restrictions on logging and other commercial activity.

The bill would put thousands of acres of forest off-limits to logging, while also guiding ski resort development, reducing forest fire danger, maintaining tribal foods such as huckleberries and enhancing outdoor recreation — particularly mountain biking, advocates said.

"This landmark bill will preserve special wild places like the rugged backcountry of Oregon's Roaring River, the thousand-year-old cedar trees in Big Bottom (and) the old-growth and drinking watersheds of Eagle Creek," said Ken Rait, campaign director of the advocacy group Campaign for America's Wilderness.

Rait and other supporters said the bill would give better protection to existing wilderness areas on Mount Hood, the state's tallest mountain and among its most popular tourist attractions.

"We must never lose sight of the fact that we protect wilderness for people," Rait said, noting that the population of nearby Oregon counties has expanded by as much as 40 percent in recent years.

"It is simply good common sense that our congressional leaders plan for this growth by conserving more lands as a responsible natural legacy, lest we and our children look back with regret," he said.

But Frank Backus, chief forester for SDS Lumber Co., a family owned business in nearby Bingen, Wash., said the proposal would lock up too many acres as wilderness. Backus also spoke on behalf of the American Forest Resource Council, a national timber industry group based in Portland. Backus is the group's chairman.