A publication of Appalachian Voices


A publication of Appalachian Voices


Groups Aim to Reshape Nantahala-Pisgah Plan

horse-riders

Volunteers ride on horseback to clear debris on the Woods Mountain Trail. Photo by Deirdre Perot.


At the moment, Deirdre Perot’s favorite part of Western North Carolina’s Pisgah National Forest is the 18.5-mile Buncombe Horse Range Trail. She recalls riding the trail on horseback in the summer of 2017.

“It got up to 95 degrees here in Rutherfordton, but it barely broke 70 degrees up there,” Perot says. “We were riding up above the clouds, it was just absolutely gorgeous.”

Perot is the national public lands representative for the Back Country Horsemen of North Carolina, part of a national nonprofit organization that works to maintain backcountry horse trails. She is also one of the founding members of the Nantahala-Pisgah Forest Partnership, a collaborative group of conservationists, an Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians representative, recreational users, timber industry representatives and more who are seeking to shape the revision of the Nantahala and Pisgah national forests’ management plan.

The U.S. Forest Service is required by law to revise individual national forest management plans every 15 years, though it can take longer. The plan for Nantahala and Pisgah was last released in 1987 and amended in 1994, and guides the management of the forests’ combined 1 million-plus acres. In 2012, the Obama Administration released an updated forest planning rule that emphasizes public input in the process. The Forest Service is slated to release the draft plan and draft environmental impact statement in fall 2018, after which there will be a 90-day public comment period and a series of public meetings.

In their recommendations for the new plan, the Nantahala-Pisgah Forest Partnership outlines their support for a forest plan that allows the interests of their 31 members and affiliates to “co-exist and thrive.” This includes better-maintained trails and campgrounds, improved protection for wilderness study areas, ecosystem restoration and more. The partnership also backs an “increase in ecologically sound timber practices that support both our local economies and healthy forest habitats.”

Top-of-Mt-Mitchell

North Carolina’s Pisgah National Forest, as seen from atop Mt. Mitchell, fades into the horizon. Photo by Kevin Ridder

One item Perot wants to see in the revised forest plan is greater access to equestrian trails. For instance, she says the Buncombe Horse Range Trail is not very well known or used, partially due to its limited parking — a challenge for horse trailers.

According to Michelle Aldridge, the Forest Service’s planning staff officer for the Nantahala-Pisgah forest plan revision, the 2012 rule allows the agency to more fully consider the different ways people use their public lands.

“It was pretty typical in the past that we would develop a proposal and we’d share it with the public and say, ‘What do you think?’” says Aldridge. “Whereas now, we’ve gone to the public much earlier to say, ‘Help us form this plan, help us identify what needs to change and give us your thoughts.’”

Timber Harvest

Timber Harvest in Pisgah National Forest

U.S. Forest Service employees inspect timber from the North Mills Area of the Pisgah National Forest. Photo by Cecilio Ricardo/USFS

Jim Sitts, Appalachian timber manager with Columbia Forest Products, felt it was “extremely important” to have the voice of the forest products industry at the table, especially considering what he describes as animosity over the years between the timber industry and non-governmental organizations.

Sitts expects the plan to open up more areas to timber harvest. “I know it’s not going to be a huge amount, but it will certainly be more than has been available in the past,” he says.

According to Josh Kelly, public lands field biologist with MountainTrue, a Western North Carolina grassroots environmental nonprofit organization, there should be more timber harvest on national forest lands to provide habitat for some declining species. Additionally, he says it can provide habitat for popular game animals.

Related: Logging and Prescribed Burns: Healthy or Harmful?

“That being said, I still think that private lands are being harvested too much, and national forests should not be expected to produce that much timber; nowhere near as close,” Kelly adds. “If you look at the past 15 years in the Nantahala-Pisgah National Forest, our forests have been putting out about 800 acres of timber harvest annually, which is well within sustainable limits. In over a 100 year period, that’d be less than 10 percent of the forest being harvested; so there’s definitely room to expand on the current levels of harvest.”

Many wilderness advocates such as John Wilson from Avery County, N.C., only want to see logging in “appropriate areas” of the national forest.

“The new forest plan must reflect the fact that the Pisgah-Nantahala Forest is a major recreation and tourism destination, and critically important to Western North Carolina’s economy. Logging in popular tourist areas like Pisgah’s Globe Forest below Blowing Rock, the Blue Ridge Parkway and Grandfather Mountain State Park damages visitor experiences and closes some areas to the public for months while trees are being cut,” Wilson wrote in an email.

According to Michelle Aldridge, “previous forest plans were focused a lot more on output, like how many board-feet [of timber] are we going to produce, how many acre-feet of water are going to be coming off the land.” Now, she says, forest plans are focused more on long-term outcomes like forest health goals and wildlife habitat — things that were already being done but were not addressed in the forest plan in the way they can be now.

“All of us who work on the plan love the forest. It’s why we enjoy our work and why we think it’s so important and such an incredible opportunity to do this work and to help chart the path to the future,” Aldridge says.

Mountain Bikes and Wilderness

Mountain biking in Pisgah

Aron Smith speeds by on a mountain bike. Photo by Cecilio Ricardo/USFS


The path to the forests’ future hasn’t been without bumps, however. Stemming from a 1984 Forest Service decision banning mountain bikes in wilderness areas, an ongoing debate between wilderness advocates and mountain bikers on wilderness land designation reared its head in late 2015. Wilderness areas are considered the gold standard of conservation. Agencies can recommend areas of federal land for this special status, but creating new wilderness requires an act of Congress and the president’s signature.

Five areas in the two forests are designated as wilderness study areas, parcels of land that are recommended by the Forest Service to be wilderness and largely managed as such, but have yet to receive congressional designation. Pisgah’s Lost Cove and Harper Creek Wilderness Study Areas are particularly valued by mountain bikers and conservationists.

In December 2015, a coalition of outdoor recreation and wilderness advocacy groups signed a Memorandum of Understanding. It recommended nearly 110,000 acres — including three current wilderness study areas — for wilderness designation, excluding existing mountain bike trails. However, the memorandum also proposed removing the Forest Service’s wilderness recommendations from Lost Cove and Harper Creek in favor of creating a 57,400-acre “Grandfather National Recreation Area.” National recreation areas are federally protected and can contain wilderness areas, but need to be approved by Congress.


The proposal ultimately crumbled after backlash from wilderness advocates like John Wilson. While many wilderness advocates would like to see a Grandfather National Recreation Area with Lost Cove and Harper Creek established as wilderness areas, they felt there was little hope of one being approved under the Republican-controlled Congress. If the Forest Service removes its recommendation for wilderness designation, Congress could more easily pass a bill to strip Lost Cove and Harper Creek of their wilderness study area status and even open it to logging.

In March, U.S. Sen. Greg Gianforte (R-MT) proposed a bill to nullify the wilderness study area status of nearly 700,000 acres of public land in Montana, signifying the possibility for similar bills affecting more states or even the entire nation.

“We have so little wilderness in North Carolina,” Wilson wrote in an email. “Less than one third of one percent of North Carolina’s land area is designated wilderness. For example, the Harper Creek and Lost Cove [Wilderness Study Areas] are only one percent of the 1.25 million acres of national forests in North Carolina.”

Paul Stahlschmidt — a co-signer of the memorandum and current board member of the Northwest North Carolina Mountain Bike Alliance, a nonprofit mountain biking association — says that mountain bikers are underserved in some areas.

“The Grandfather Ranger District [which contains Lost Cove and Harper Creek] as a whole only has 21 percent of its trails open to bikes,” Stahlschmidt wrote in an email. “That is 57 miles out of 267.”

According to Wilson, many individuals and conservation organizations that want to see Harper Creek and Lost Cove wilderness designations are helping to expand mountain biking opportunities in the Grandfather area outside the two wilderness study areas.

“I don’t think wilderness and expanding non-wilderness recreational opportunities are mutually exclusive,” Wilson wrote in an email. “Both are so important to our people and to our state’s economy. Working together, conservation and recreation advocates can accomplish much more than we can separately. That collaboration is more important than ever given the current political climate.”

linville_gorge_backpackers

Backpackers near a swimming hole in the Linville Gorge Wilderness Area. Photo courtesy of Maeve Gould


Stahlschmidt says he supports new wilderness designations that are “accepted by the majority of the public. In locations where other options could serve the public better, gain more support, and continue to protect the land, I support those [other options].”

“Mountain bikers are conservationists,” Stahlschmidt adds. “They go to the forest for the same reasons that hikers and hunters and equestrians and fishermen and others who seek nature, beauty, and solitude. There are certainly some interests that are unique to these groups, but the large majority of interests are similar. It is that which we should all rally behind.”

Once the draft forest plan and draft environmental impact statement is released this fall, there will be a 90-day public comment period and a series of public meetings.

“As owners of our national forests, Americans need to be involved in how they’re managed,” Wilson states. “Public participation is critical in the actual development of plans for our forests, not just reviews of completed drafts. I think the [Forest Service] has made genuine efforts to make this participation possible.”

Related: Q&A With Nantahala-Pisgah Plan Stakeholders

Author’s note: This story was updated on Oct. 9, 2018, to clarify that the Obama forest planning rule emphasizes public input, and that while the U.S. Forest Service is required by law to revise individual national forest management plans every 15 years, it can take longer.


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2 COMMENTS
  1. S A Hanna says:

    Errors: frequency of plan revision is wrong. Also, Obama made no change in public input rules. Also, the sustained yield estimate using 800 acres is not even close to what silviculturists have told you.

  2. kevin says:

    S A Hanna,

    Thanks for sharing your concerns. While the U.S. Forest Service does require that the forest plan be revised every 15 years, it can take longer for the process to be completed due to funding and personnel shortages. This is the case with Sumter National Forest, which is supposed to begin its revision in 2019 but likely will not begin until 2024 or 2026, according to Forest Service staff.

    Source: https://appvoices.org/2018/08/09/where-does-your-forest-stand-with-the-plan/

    Additionally, the current Pisgah-Nantahala plan was released in 1987 and amended in 1994. The revision process began in 2014, making it 20 years since the last time it has been revisited.

    You are correct that then-President Obama did not change public input rules in the Forest Planning Rule of 2012. However, a greater emphasis was placed on public input then, as evidenced by the final text of the planning rule published in the Federal Register in April 2012:

    “It [the planning rule] also emphasizes providing meaningful opportunities for public participation early and throughout the planning process, increases the transparency of decision-making, and provides a platform for the Agency to work with the public and across boundaries with other land managers to identify and share information and inform planning.”

    Source: https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5362536.pdf

    I’ve updated the article to clarify those two points.

    As for the sustained yield estimate, Josh Kelly was referring to the annual harvest numbers, not the sustained yield estimate. The direct quote used in the article states:

    “If you look at the past 15 years in the Nantahala-Pisgah National Forest, our forests have been putting out about 800 acres of timber harvest annually, which is well within sustainable limits. In over a 100 year period, that’d be less than 10 percent of the forest being harvested; so there’s definitely room to expand on the current levels of harvest.”

    I spoke with Kelly on Oct. 9, 2018, to clarify that he was referring to annual harvest numbers.

    According to Dale Remington, a timber sales manager for the Forest Service in 2014, annual harvest from the Pisgah-Nantahala National Forest from 2002-2014 averaged 860 acres.

    Source: https://www.nationalforests.org/assets/pdfs/Dale_Remington-timber-management2.pdf

    Thank you,

    Kevin Ridder
    Associate Editor, The Appalachian Voice

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