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The Monkey Wrench Gang Rides Again

By Ben Corbett | Monday, June 22, 2009 4:38 AM ET

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Well, okay, “Rides Again” might be a stretch. Let's just say the Monkey Wrench Gang has finally inspired sustainable logging practices. The Associated Press reports that 26 years after the Bald Mountain logging protests carried out by Earth First!, the House Hope Stewardship Project is restoring 890 acres of the area with funds from Obama's stimulus package. The project consists of crews running through the old logging areas, thinning out brush and slash piles in order to create a healthier forest ecology. Currently, the forests are unhealthy, and the U.S. Forest Service estimates that 60 to 80 million acres need help. (Read the full feature here).

 

Back in 1983, Mike Roselle and Dave Foreman founded Earth First! after reading Edward Abbey's controversial 1975 novel, The Money Wrench Gang. Inspired by the book, Earth First's first action was to block a bulldozer, which led to their arrest, as well as the beginning of the Northwest timber wars. This confrontational approach initiated a new radical activism in the environmental movement.

As for the logging companies adjusting to modern times, the report gives the example of the Rough & Ready Lumber Co., which is taking steps to tap the California market with its stringent green-building codes. According to the report, Rough & Ready has had its products certified by the Forest Stewardship Council. In order to meet the codes, the company has to kiln dry its lumber, and the ovens are heated with slashing from the forest thinning projects, which also creates electricity in a co-generation plant. Some anticipate that this model of zero waste and sustainability is a prototype that will be adopted slowly by loggers in the Northwest. Not only will it prove more cost-effective, but as consumers continue to shift toward green construction, the demand for certifiably sustainable forest products will dictate the market.

Described by the National Review as a "countercultural journalist out of Colorado," Ben Corbett has contributed to numerous magazines and newsweeklies and authored the non-fiction book, "This is Cuba: An Outlaw Culture Survives."

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Mark

150 days ago

Hey Ben how much adapting do you see on the current Discovery Channel series that follow the logging industries? Maybe I'm just naive about the whole industry and what is considered "best practices" but as I drove back to Seattle from Astoria on Hwy 101 is was floored by the carnage and devastation I witnessed. All of this with the blessing of our wonderful US De-Forest Service.

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Ben Corbett

150 days ago

We have to start somewhere, Mark. And taking care of the reforested areas is essential. Loggers have to become sustainable too at some point or they'll be put out of business. LEED will be mandatory soon. True, though, this Discovery Channel thing is bothersome. I'm gonna be on Highway 101 soon driving south. Wanna meet up and decommission a few log skidders and other machinery?

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