Siskiyou Crest National Monument
Guest Opinion
Pioneer Press
Fort Jones, CA
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
page 15 col 4
By Grace Bennet, Siskiyou County
Supervisor District 4
This summer there has been much
discussion about the proposed Siskiyou Crest
National Monument to be established in Oregon
from Interstate 5 west to past the Oregon Caves;
in California from Interstate 5 to south of
Happy Camp using the Klamath River as the
southern boundary. This is a very special
range of mountains as they run in an east-west
configuration.
The Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center in
Ashland, Oregon is working hard to make this
National Monument happen. A group of young
people went on a 9-day hike through this area
using the Pacific Crest Trail. They filmed
wonderful water, beautiful flowers, wildlife,
glades, and meadows and experienced the grandeur
of this area. It is wonderful to hike, find a
rock to sit on, watch the wildlife, and hear
nothing but the sounds of the forest. It renews
the soul. Everyone should be able to experience
this, not just those that can hike great
distances or ride horses.
This area is public and private land. From the
Seiad Valley east to Interstate 5 it is
checker-boarded with both. Public land is
administered by a number of Federal agencies:
the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land
Management, Bureau of Reclamation and many
more. These agencies manage this land for the
benefit of the people because this is our land.
The people who live here use this land for
everything from hunting, wood cutting, off
highway riding, or just a pleasant afternoon
drive for an older couple remembering when they
could hike and camp and who still enjoy the
experience of the outdoors.
Private land is just that: it is
owned by private individuals. They can use it
for farming, ranching, timber harvest or any
others uses they see fit. Of course, in our
present world they have to comply with many
regulations and requirements before performing
these activities.
These are the people that supply
our food and work the land so that we can all
enjoy the benefits and fruits of their labor.
The following was excerpted from a report by Ric
Costales, Natural Resource Policy Specialist for
Siskiyou County:
"Since passage of the Antiquities Act under
which National Monuments are created, numerous
land designations within the federal domain have
been adopted which more specifically address
appropriate protections for the environmental
resources in a manner that best accommodates all
of the other considerations of land management.
For example, Wilderness, Roadless, Late
Successional Reserve, Riparian Reserve, Wild
River, and Back Country Area are all
designations requiring exceptional protection,
but do allow varying degrees of management and
use suitable to the landscape to which they have
been assigned.
"Such designations are far better management
tools in this day and age particularly when
adaptive strategies are necessary to reintroduce
wildfire to the ecosystem without the
catastrophic loss of vast acreages in sensitive
watersheds. As well, these designations better
accommodate complex private property components
within the adjoining federal lands proposed for
Monument status. For example, the following
chart illustrates this point relative to the
Klamath National Forest part of the proposed
Siskiyou Crest National Monument:
Mgt. Area Acres in Proposed Monuments
Special Mgt. RNA, SIA,
Cultural 2,031.35
Wilderness, BVNG
49,504.87
Special Habitat, LSR
100,118.85
Special Habitat T$E
Species 1,066.62
Managed Wildlife
Area 4,933.58
Backcountry
Area
32.677.73
Riparian
Area
32,677.73
Retention VQO
5,340.97
Scenic
River
191.53
Recreational
River 90.30
Total
acres
205,412.36
"It can be seen that the vast majority of the
proposed Monument in California (80%) is already
sufficiently protected for environmental
quality. For the greater part, this approach
allows sufficient flexibility to respond to
critical management challenges.
"National Monuments do not support adaptive
management practices, particularly with regard
to public safety issues associated with wildfire
and forest health. Any National Monument
proposal clearly needs to meet the needs of ALL
people, not just a small coterie of special and
very limited interests."
My question to you is do we need more protection
on these lands? No one has asked the citizens
of Siskiyou County how we feel about this new
proposed National Monument. This area would be
like the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument with
restricted uses and access for you, the people.
Many, if not most, of the current roads would be
closed. A few of these now provide an
evacuation route in case of emergencies along
the Klamath River.
I want to hear from you because this is your
land! When you write to me, make a copy of your
letter and forward it to your representatives,
County, State and Federal and to President
Obama. We all need to know how you feel.
Siskiyou County Supervisor District 4, Grace
Bennett , P. O. Box 750, Yreka, CA 96097.
(Permission to post from the publisher.)