The welcome demise of the ‘conservation’ collaboration fraud

Editor’s Note: For those of you not in Montana, you may not be familiar with the editorials of George Ochenski. George Ochenski was an environmental and tribal lobbyist at the Montana legislature for 22 years and and wrote, funded and passed many of the significant environmental bills in Montana during those decades. He is Montana’s longest running weekly political columnist. From time to time, we are going to share his insights here because they are very important.


Montana environmental ‘collaboration’ at work. Steve Platt

One thing seems certain following the elections on the national and state level — resource-rich states like Montana are going to be on the edge of the bulldozer blade.  That future will present daunting challenges to maintain the wild lands and clean rivers that continue to sustain the same native species that were present when Lewis and Clark Expedition passed through Montana more than two centuries ago.  

On the upside, it will likely spell the demise of the conservation collaboration movement that has utterly failed to produce significant results after nearly three decades of failed appeasement to extractive industries and environmentally harmful uses.

For those new to Montana, a little history may be useful. 

Collaboration got its start here in the ’90s when then-governor Marc Racicot appointed his hand-picked Consensus Council to ostensibly find “balance” on thorny natural resource issues to end the “timber wars.” 

The fact is the industry was losing that “war” since most of the large trees had already been logged. Then Plum Creek Timber decided to liquidate its Montana timber holdings on the checkerboard sections they owned in virtually every valley and mountain range in the state.  The liquidation produced massive clearcuts right to the boundary of wilderness areas, thousands of miles of eroding logging roads, and pushed species like the bull trout onto the Endangered Species List.  

When Montanans rebelled at the devastation of their beloved landscapes and natural amenities the industry moved to find “consensus” — which then morphed into collaboration.  Simply put, extractive industries viewed the process as a way to get at least half of what they wanted rather than fighting a losing battle to get far less. 

Make no mistake, although collaboration was spawned by extractive industries, the national foundations that pour millions of dollars into conservation organizations willingly jumped on board, preferring not to fund groups that sued the government when it broke or failed to enforce environmental laws.

When Jon Tester beat Sen. Conrad Burns, sure enough the faux-conservation groups had a collaborative proposal ready to go — the Forest Jobs and Recreation Act.  Not only did it open wilderness quality lands to extractive industries, it actually mandated national forest logging levels – a move so radically anti-conservation that even the U.S. Forest Service opposed it.

It died in the Senate, but the same groups leaped to put together another foundation-funded collaborative measure, the Blackfoot-Clearwater Stewardship Act.  And once again, it divvies up wilderness quality public lands to extractive and special interests.  With Tester’s loss in the recent elections, it’s fair to say the measure’s passage is doubtful since there’s not even a companion bill in the U.S. House. 

Hard on the heels of these failures, comes now the Lincoln Prosperity Proposal and the Gallatin Forest Partnership Agreement – both of which again chop up and give away wilderness quality lands to extractive industries and industrial recreation. Long-time conservationists have already rebelled against the Partnership’s plan, aghast at the lands and wildlife habitat the collaborators have sacrificed.

The Trump administration has already pledged to cut loose extractive industries with no conservation sidebars — not even the lame “cut the baby in half” proposals offered by the collaborators.

The good news is that decades of collaborative failures, the Trump administration’s promised onslaught on our remaining wild lands and wildlife, and a growing backlash against the collaborators’ proposals, may lead to the rebirth of true conservation advocacy that fights for wild lands and wildlife, with a hopeful vision for future generations — and that would truly be something for which to be thankful.  

This was first published in the Daily Montanan. You can read all of George’s articles at https://dailymontanan.com/author/george-ochenski/


Editor’s Note: When this commentary was originally shared, Kenneth Brower, the son of David Brower, the first Executive Director of the Sierra Club and founder of The Friends of the Earth wrote:

Yep, this is the Montana version of our Quincy Library “collaboration” between environmentalists and loggers in N. California.   “Why can’t we just sit and reason together” is the rationale.  The reason we shouldn’t is that the other side, the loggers, the extractive interests, are sharks and they’ll eat your lunch.  My dad was dead against this sort of thing.  There was a similar deal at the Sierra Club in the 60s.  PG&E came to certain board members of the Club and said, “Why are we always fighting?  Why can’t we reason together?  You don’t want us to build our nuclear reactor at Nipomo Dunes; let’s confer and find a site agreeable to both sides.”   That’s not our job, my old man said.  Helping you find a site on the coast.  When the SC board agreed to accept the site at
Diablo Canyon, he refused to go along and ran a slate of board candidates
opposed to Diablo Canyon.  His slate lost and he was forced to resign as ED.   The Club’s most egregious compromise came earlier.  It was to consent to two dams of the Colorado River Storage Project (one of the 2 was Glen Canyon Dam) and not fight all four.  The board undermined him on the eve of the vote with a telegram to desist resistance to all 4, when he believed he had the votes in Congress to stop all of them.)  His general principle thereafter was: our job as
conservationists is not to compromise; it’s to fight as hard as we can for what
we believe is right for the Earth.  

 “Let the politicians do the compromise, when it comes to that.  That’s what we pay them for.” Ken

For those too young to remember David Brower, I strongly recommend you explore his work and writing, as well as the conservation greats of that early era.

This era, say before 1980, was a time before the US conservation movement had been polluted and degraded by the current anthropocentric view of conservation (that conservation and preservation is only valid and useful if it benefits humans) which has destroyed its effectiveness.

For those who know only conservation since 1980, you really need to understand the real roots, before its legs and arms were hacked off by the strings attached by the major foundations that now control US conservation.


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Comments

  1. Fred Koontz Avatar
    Fred Koontz

    Recommend Dave Forman’s 2012 book, Take Back Conservation. We are compromising the world away.

  2. Wayne Tyson Avatar
    Wayne Tyson

    I counted trees for the Farce Service on the Plumas NF in the late fifties and early sixties. A certain huge lumber corporation traded the cutover land they acquired from a local “timber products” concern and worked a 4:1 trade for some very high-site USFS virgin timber land full of prime sugar pines (10+ butt-cuts were common). I watched them push over the kind of sticks (16″ butt cutts) they were taking twenty-five years later out of there ) to make skid-trails to the logs, and repeat it on the way back, leaving them as deep slash. That area burned last year. They couldn’t stop it.

    Later that summer (’60?), a lightning strike hit the decks, and burned like a fuse along it. I drove through there while it was still burning, having seen the fire from miles away; I thought it was a forest fire. The crane operator said he saw the strike and drove his pickup to the crane. He lifted logs out of the deck quite a distance from the burning one to make a break, but he misjudged–he left the crane when the paint started smoking, and drove his pickup away as fast as he could. The fire went through the pre-heated logs like the gap wasn’t there. Every stick burned (the radiant heat was that hot, and probably more) of all the year’s work that weren’t in the pond or milled. More than four feet of ash. I got to thinking, “Could that have been an angry God?”

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Author
Jonathan Ratner

Jonathan Ratner has been in the trenches of public lands conservation for nearly 25 years. He started out doing forest carnivore work for the Forest Service, BLM, and the Inter-agency Grizzly Bear Study Team, with some Wilderness Rangering on the Pinedale Ranger District. That work lead him directly to deal with the gross corruption within the federal agencies' range program.

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