Group and timber industry divided on fate of Oregon logging roads

GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) — A conservation group said Wednesday it will keep pushing federal authorities to more closely regulate muddy logging roads, despite a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on Wednesday that sided with the timber industry on the issue.
Activists believe the ruling left room to press the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to regulate runoff from the roads through specific permits, rather than broad recommendations, said Paul Kampmeier, a lawyer representing the Northwest Environmental Defense Center.
The center sued the Oregon Department of Forestry over roads in Tillamook State Forest that drain into salmon streams.
The suit contends the Clean Water Act specifically says water running through ditches and culverts built to handle storm water from logging roads is a source of pollution when it flows directly into a river.
Such roads require the same sort of permit from the federal agency as a factory, the suit states.
However, in a 7-1 vote, the high court reversed a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that held logging road runoff into salmon streams is the same as any other industrial pollution.
"The Supreme Court ruling today, while not the ruling we wanted, certainly suggests EPA has the power to solve the problem," Kampmeier said. "We expect to continue working with EPA to get a solution that will be effective on the ground."
The EPA disagreed with the appeals court ruling, and Justice Anthony Kennedy said for the court that the agency's reading of its own regulations is entitled to deference from the court.
The agency has since issued a new regulation that makes it clear that water from logging roads is the same as runoff from a farmer's field and is not industrial pollution.
The environmental center filed another lawsuit in January challenging the new rule. But Kampmeier said it is unclear if that challenge will go forward in light of the Supreme Court ruling.
Activists could cite different sections of the Clean Water Act requiring permits for operations that pollute U.S. waters or violate clean water standards.
The court "effectively said EPA gets to decide whether to regulate by requiring permits for polluting roads," Kampmeier said. "Because EPA has said they didn't intend to regulate them, the court found EPA did not require permits."
EPA referred comment to the U.S. Department of Justice, which said it was reviewing the ruling.
Dave Tenny, president of the National Alliance of Forest Owners, praised the current EPA policy that regulates logging roads the same as farm fields. He expects the legal challenge to continue, even though he said it has only caused disruption.
"We just won an important round in an ongoing fight," Tenny said. "What we have been looking for all along is to maintain what EPA has done successfully for 37 years."
Per Ramfjord, an attorney representing the timber industry, said he doubted the appeals court would be receptive to new challenges to the EPA, given the strong majority in the Supreme Court ruling.
Oh wrong timbers I was looking for the score
Who said there is no logging??
Just look at google maps sat view Any forrest it is a patch work of clear cutting everywhere you look..
we dont need logging, we have plastic
I camped at Rainey Lake many years ago and the tree huggers were complaining about the timber industry Rainey Lake campground would not be there unless there was logging.
This is just depressing to think about.
What logging roads? Â The ones that used to exist, but are now closed by the Forest Service, to restrict access to public lands? Â What logging? Â It's all shut down, except for the small jobs on private land. Â These "activists" are never happy. Â Still searching for their own piece of Utopia.
@pdxracefan Look at google maps sat view it is a patch work of clear cutting everywhere...
Reality it's not just for breakfast......
These enviro activist could probably accomplish a lot more if they would just take a realistic common sense approach to problems. Instead of outrageous demands over and over. They need to realize we can't save everything at once. We are humans who can only survive by using earths resources. But we should use them responsibly when possible. Â
Yet another reversal for the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals........
@trololol That's why its called the 9th circus court
The Northwest Environmental Defense Center likes to see lots of people unemployed it would appear.
Typical of "activists".
Sounds like the Supreme Court got it completely and totally right.Â
Roads are good things. Not impediments to the cycle of life. People and ANIMALS utilize them. We manage our lands better and best because we allow for roads to be built and people and animals to have the right to access them. We cycle on them. We hike on them. We camp from them. We harvest renewable forest products from them. And people one day actually will use a road to access a river to put a pole in the water to catch a salmon, too. If we just allow the renewable process of logging and regeneration to go on and on and on. Along with roads being built.Â
And today - the spotted owl has returned to land that was renewably logged.. To no one's surprise but the "conservation" movement that fact has actually occurred  Does the NEDC "need" the U.S. Supreme Court explaining to them how "that" occurred naturally, too - along with salmon returning one day to the streams?Â
Enviro wacko's couldn't even get all their Supremes to vote for them.. A truly Bi- Partisan decision:)