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Indybay Feature

Salmon River Tree-Sits Blocked by Feds, public forest closed to public

by Klamath Salmon Action Network (bwsisq [at] yahoo.com)
The Klamath National Forest has issued a closure order to starve out tree-sitter that are defending wild public lands on the Salmon River. The Klamath Salmon Action Network is planning an Action Camp from the 7-13th, and actions and rallies to support the sitters
photo1_1_.jpeg
Federal agents are blockading three tree-sits in the Klamath National Forest in the Salmon River watershed. The Salmon River is the only undammed, undiverted river that feeds the Klamath and has had three tree sits blocking part of the Glassups Old Growth Timber Sale for a week and a half. The Klamath-Action Network is a group involved in the tree-sits and promises continued resistance for the Knob and Meteor Timber Sales, which are also public lands old growth sales in the Salmon River.

Columbia Helicopters, an international company that specializes in helicopter logging steep and unstable slopes, are clear-cutting and high grading native forest in the National Forest, which is why the
tree-sits are there.. Old growth logging destroy water quality, endangered species, and the forests
natural resistance to fire. " These sales will hurt not help forest health by taking out the fire resistant old growth, leaving brush fields behind, destroying a rural town's drinking water, and endangering Klamath
Salmon" stated Mari Posa, a spokes woman for the group.

Two men attempting to visit and photograph the tree-sits were detained for forty minutes Sunday by three federal agents who ticketed them. They were
unaware they weren't allowed on public lands. The two men must appear in federal court in Redding on Tuesday.

The tree-sits have been cut off from their ground support. Attempting tostarve tree-sitters out of the trees is an old tactic that doesn't always
work, and can result in a standoff between hunger striking tree-sitters and deforesters. It is not yet clear whether the forest service and federal agents will attempt to extract the tree-sitters.

The tree sit is part of Cascadia Summer, a campaign to save native public forest throughout Northern California, Oregon and Washington. The Klamath
National Forest of concern to the campaign as it is one of the wildest and most diverse forests in the United States

Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by DownLow (herbalgreen21 [at] hotmail.com)
Hey who ever took this pictrure tell the kid in the tree I said whats up!!! Yup tellhim also all is well on the East and I'll meet up this June/July!!!!He'll know who this is ,so yup I'm out keep up the good work "Earth First" Mother Earth appreciates it!!!!!!!
by end corporate subsidies
Two treesitters arrested last June in the Klamath National Forest will stand trial in Federal Court on November 18, 2003 in Redding, California.

At an October 21, 2003 hearing, a public defender informed them of the "option" of either pleading guilty to three misdemeanor charges, for which they would receive an unspecified amount of jail time, fines and/or probation, rendering the term "plea bargain" meaningless, or else stand trial that day. Given the worthlessness of this "option" they weren't sure what to do. The public pretender, er, defender, told the judge they would plead guilty regardless of the fact the two had made no such decision.

Treesitter "Amazon"spoke up to correct him, stating she had not made a decision. The judge, being one of the few people in the room who has a grasp on the law (aside from the need to uphold the Endangered Species Act, Clean Water Act, etc), corrected the public defender and the Forest Service, saying they wouldn't be able to hold trial that day.

Trial has been set for 2:00pm on November 18, 2003 at the Federal Courthouse in Redding. Supporters are encouraged to come

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