Tongass committee could vote on timber recommendations

Photo of trees in the Tongass National Forest
The Tongass National Forest covers roughly 16.8 million acres. (Photo by Henry Hartley/Wikimedia Commons)

The Tongass Advisory Committee will kick off a three-day meeting in Ketchikan Wednesday morning, and on the agenda is the potential adoption of recommendations to the U.S. Forest Service.

The TAC was formed last summer after Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack ordered Tongass National Forest officials to come up with a plan to transition from old-growth to second-growth timber harvest over the next 10 to 15 years.

The committee is expected to give recommendations to help move that planning process forward. The committee includes representatives of the timber industry, conservation groups and local governments. They’ve met in various communities in Southeast Alaska since last August.

The committee and its work aren’t without controversy. The Greater Southeast Alaska Conservation Community, for example, sent out comments this week questioning the conservation representatives chosen for the committee. The comments also criticized the focus on timber, rather than including other forest uses.

According to a summary of the last meeting, which took place in Juneau, the committee talked about the timeframe, and noted that the first five years likely would see a gradual shift toward young growth. That time period will be used for planning and identifying stands. The second five years would speed the process up.

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