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Evacuations underway after barge slammed into Pelican Island bridge in Galveston, causing oil spill; Regional program helps Chicago-area communities become 'EV Ready'; MI leaders mark progress in removing lead water lines; First Amendment rights to mass protest under attack in Mississippi and beyond.

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Speaker of the House Johnson calls the Trump trial 'a sham', federal officials are gathering information about how AI could impact the 2024 election, and, preliminary information shows what could have caused the Francis Scott Key Bridge crash.

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Americans are buying up rubber ducks ahead of Memorial Day, Nebraskans who want residential solar have a new lifeline, seven community colleges are working to provide students with a better experience, and Mississippi's "Big Muddy" gets restoration help.

Update coming for 30-year-old Northwest Forest Plan

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Wednesday, March 13, 2024   

The U.S. Forest Service has announced its intention to update a 30-year-old plan for managing forests in the Northwest.

The agency has issued a Notice of Intent to amend the Northwest Forest Plan. The plan covers management for 19 million acres of forest in California, Oregon and Washington and was adopted in 1994, but has not changed since.

Nick Goulette, co-executive director of the Watershed Research and Training Center, said the plan needs improving, especially as climate impacts on the region increase.

"It really requires active management to protect the remaining old trees and to really work with fire as a natural process," Goulette pointed out. "The plan didn't do a good job of understanding the sort of real diversity of forests."

Goulette acknowledged despite the need for improvements, the plan has largely been successful at conserving habitat. A draft Environmental Impact Statement on the updated plan is expected by June.

Ryan Reed, co-founder of the FireGeneration Collaborative and from the Karuk, Hupa and Yurok tribes in Northern California, said tribes in the Northwest were not part of the 1994 plan. This time around, Reed stressed it is critical to have their meaningful inclusion in the process.

One area where he believes Indigenous insight is critical is in the traditional use of fire and reestablishing its good use on the landscape as a suppression tool for the larger fires the region is increasingly seeing.

"The Indigenous use of fire doesn't exclusively benefit or impact Indigenous communities ourselves," Reed emphasized. "It impacts everyone in the ecosystems. It impacts everyone who depends on ecosystems, right, no matter what sector you are or whatever stakeholder you are."

Goulette contended promises were made to rural, forest-dependent communities under the Northwest Forest Plan but never realized. He argued updating the plan is a chance to rectify problems and focus on areas like recreation, management of timber resources and stewardship.

"There's a lot that these rural communities stand to contribute and a lot they stand to benefit from being really active participants," Goulette added. "The plan for getting more focused on and some additional components that focus on rural communities is really important to us."


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