It was payback. Employees of Plum Creek have donated almost
$20,000 to Baucus this past year, and the company spent $200,000 in
lobbying fees during the period in which the Farm Bill was being
debated in Congress.
The forest removal industry has for
decades been rewarded for its bad behavior. They have been given
unfettered access to log on our public lands, with subsidies aiding
them along the way. Even when push came to shove they have always made
out like bandits, sharing little of their uber-wealth with the public
who helped finance their success -- not to mention ever giving back to
the habitat they profited from by destroying.
If I sound bitter, it's because I am.
Plum
Creek, after cutting virtually all the good trees on its Montana land,
is about to be compensated for its loss by so-called conservationists.
Last week the Nature Conservancy and the Trust for Public Land
announced a backroom deal, brokered by Sen. Baucus himself, that would
transfer up to 300,000 acres of the company's despoiled property over
to the groups for the amount of $510 million. It is to become the
largest, most expensive conservation deal in U.S. history.
Nonetheless,
all that money isn't going to be paid by the green groups alone. In
fact, the Federal government will cover half of the tab, thanks to Sen.
Baucus of course, with Montanans paying another $100 million. The rest
will be raised by the conservationists who claim they are actually
saving the land from residential development.
It should be
clear that Plum Creek doesn't deserve the hundreds of millions of
dollars it's going to receive from taxpayers. Instead the company ought
to be the one cutting checks for all the environmental damage they've
caused to grizzly and fish habitat throughout the state over the years.
Here's
a little information about Montana's non-forest policy that Plum Creek
Timber and others have exploited: The state is essentially a resource
treasure chest that has no acting forest practices in place to regulate
private lands. In short, it's a deregulated, boondoggle, free-for-all.
And Plum Creek, in this case, liquidated its assets (trees) and is now
selling off their land off under the guise of conservation, paid in
large part by the public.
However, what's being conserved is still up for debate.
"I
recently flew over some of the Plum Creek land that the public will
eventually get west of Seeley Lake, Montana, and it was mile after mile
of clearcuts," says Michael Garrity, Executive Director of Helena,
Montana based Alliance for the Wild Rockies. "That is probably one
reason Plum Creek agreed to sell it and not develop the land into
vacation subdivisions. Who wants a vacation home in a middle of a
clearcut?"
So let's get this straight, Plum Creek builds logging
roads through prime grizzly habitat, pollutes rivers, and clearcuts
forests just so they can sell it off at a huge profit, and somehow
we're supposed to be exited about a deal that will stop some
development, but not all of it?
Yes, that's right, Plum Creek
can still log on some of this land, but they can only do so if
certified "sustainable" by a third-party verifier.
"Many of
these third party certificates are worthless if the public is not
allowed to over see them," says Garrity. "And it is not clear if the
public will."
This fact alone should raise the hackles of
taxpayers who are footing the majority of Plum Creek's bill. They may
have little input about what actually happens on the land they helped
pay for. The agreement will also allow the Forest Service, an agency
wrought with a history of corruption and mismanagement, to oversee half
of the land down the road.
It is just one more tale of
environmental compromise that many greens have for far too long been
forced to accept in Montana and the Pacific Northwest when dealing with
resource extraction outfits like Plum Creek and conservationists such
as the Nature Conservancy. These guys run the only game in town, which
is fixed at the highest levels by senators like Max Baucus who operate
behind the curtains of power with impunity.
So how good is this deal when all is said and done?
"Nothing
is good about 150 years of corporate subsidies, but the unintended
consequences are less evil than the subdivisions alternative," says
veteran forest activist Steve Kelly of Bozeman, Montana. "Oh, there
will still be subdivisions, just a lot fewer. Good, or excellent, is
never an option in a rigged world limited to choosing between the
lesser of two evils."
Joshua Frank is the author of
Left Out! (Common Courage Press) and the co-editor, with Jeffrey St.
Clair, of Red State Rebels: Tales of Grassroots Resistance in the
Heartland (AK Press). Visit the new Red State Rebels website at
www.RedStateRebels.org.