Nature and Politics
by Jeffrey St. Clair and Alexander Cockburn
Why David Chain Died
David "Gypsy" Chain was killed on September 17 on Pacific Lumber land near
Grizzly Creek off Route 36 in Humboldt County because he formed part of the
last line of defense in a battle plan fatally betrayed by Democratic
politicians and environmental executives cringing before a corporate
predator from Chain's own state of Texas. A.E. Ammonds, the 52-year-old
faller who put the tree down on Chain, crushing his skull, was the party
immediately responsible for the young man's death, but if Ammonds ever has
to face charges on involuntary manslaughter, the people who put him in the
woods that day should bear the full brunt of penalties consequent upon a
wrongful death.
The terrain where Chain died forms part of the Headwaters Forest, owned by
Pacific Lumber, taken over some years ago by Maxxam, owned by Charles
Hurwitz. As is well known, Headwaters is the largest private holding of
old-growth redwoods in the world. When Hurwitz announced a few years ago
that his crews would start logging, the most resolute plan against the
tycoon was to have the U.S. government penalize Hurwitz for his looting of
a Texas Savings and Loan by taking Headwaters from him as compensation for
his $2 billion heist. But this plan fell by the wayside, derided by the
establishment enviros as far too extreme.
Next came a well conceived plan by former Rep. Dan Hamburg to have the U.S.
government buy out 40,000 acres of the entire 63,000 acre watershed for a
substantial, albeit defensible sum. Although it was helped forward through
Congress by two of the craftiest manipulators on the Hill--Vernon Jordan
and Tommy Boggs, working for Hurwitz--the bill failed in the Senate.
Then came a well-conceived strategy by EPIC, the enviro group based in
Garberville, to tame Hurwitz by rigorous application of federal and state
regs. Thus, thousands of acres would be put off limits to the chainsaw in
order to protect dwindling habitat for the marbled murrelet, the Northern
spotted owl and the coho salmon. Given the ravaged condition of Pacific
Lumber's holdings after a decade of Hurwitz's onslaughts, the mandatory
protections for these species would put most of the land out of Hurwitz's
reach.
EPIC puts its strategy into play with a series of lawsuits and petitions
under the Endangered Species Act, and the strategy began to take effect. At
this point Hurwitz raised the stakes, announcing that in the face of these
regulatory inhibitions, he was going to file a "takings" suit against the
US government, suing it for hundreds of millions for preventing him from
enjoying the rights and ravages of private property.
The Clinton administration and large environmental organizations such as
the Sierra Club and the Wilderness Society took this threat as the tocsin
for immediate retreat. Hurwitz, they quavered, might have a chance of
victory in such a takings claim, which would encourage further "hostage
taking" by corporations. So, they argued, the prudent course was to give
Hurwitz more than he had ever dared dream when he had sent Jordan and Boggs
up to Capitol Hill to work for the Hamburg bill.
Enter Senator Dianne Feinstein. The California senator successfully lobbied
Clinton to announce a deal whereby the feds and the state of California
would pool money to acquire the minimal core area of Headwaters, less than
10,000 acres of the entire watershed. Of that, only 3,500 acres are
composed of old growth redwoods, for which the government offered to
Hurwitz the astounding sum of $480 million.
One story going around Washington and Sacramento is that Hurwitz had argued
that the acres were worth $900 million, roughly what he paid for the entire
company, and the Department of Justice countered with a valuation of $20
million. At which point Tommy Boggs said, Why not split the difference?
By any measure this is surely one of Hurwitz's greatest financial coups.
But there was a lagniappe. As part of the deal Hurwitz demanded that he be
allowed to work his will on the rest of the entire 210,000 acres of his
Pacific Lumber holdings. The U.S. Department of Interior and the State of
California duly agreed to sign off on a Habitat Conservation Plan or HCP
proposed by Pacific Lumber. In the Clinton area these HCPs have become the
preferred corporate method of circumventing the Endangered Species Act.
Pacific Lumber's HCP will allow the company to largely liquidate the old
growth and residual redwood and Douglas fir tracts outside of the 10,000
acres scheduled to be bought by the government. The company is scheduled to
receive a permit to kill as many as 340 marbled murrelets, the threatened
seabird that nests in coastal old growth forest. This amounts to 17 per
cent of a total murrelet population in precipitous decline.
Right now on Pacific Lumber lands there are 116 pairs of nesting spotted
owls. The HCP estimates that 16 pairs will be "taken," i.e., killed, and in
the words of a California CDF consultant for the plan, "the population [of
owls] will be allowed to fluctuate with changes in the landscape." Given
that the spotted owl population has been declining at as much as a 4 per
cent annual rate in Clinton-time, none of this bodes well for the
creature's long- or even middle-term survival. On top of that, if the
evidence shows that the owl and the murrelet are disappearing at even
higher rates, a "no surprises" clause successfully demanded by Hurwitz
means that nothing can be done for 50 years, by which time the whole show
will be over.
The coho salmon is probably the most complicated factor in the whole deal
and the species that could potentially keep most of the remaining mature
forest on Pacific Lumber's lands out of the sawmills. But instead of
pushing an aggressive conservation strategy, the government accepted the
following brazen proposal in Pacific Lumber's HCP: on what are called
year-round salmon-bearing streams, PL proposed a 30-foot no-cut buffer on
each side. The federal guidelines for such streams in Washington, Oregon
and California require between 300 feet and 500 feet, depending on the
slope. On year-round streams without salmon that flow into salmon streams,
Pacific Lumber has successfully proposed a ten-foot "buffer," which is of
course entirely meaningless.
At this level of protection the coho, once the mainstay of the Indian
economy, has no future at all.
There was a recent opportunity to lay this whole dreadful plan low. The
feds approved its $250 million slice of the $480 million last year when
Clinton signed the Interior appropriations bill. But the deal still had to
be approved by the California general assembly, where EPIC was making a
decent effort at monkey-wrenching the process by fierce lobbying, stirring
up fiscal conservatives at the huge cost to the taxpayer, and making
environmentally minded legislators writhe at the preposterousness of the
HCPs.
But working the phones behind the scenes were conspirators in the drama
which would end in David Chain's death. Dianne Feinstein and Tommy Boggs
lobbied hard, and as the bill picked up legislative speed in Sacramento the
one group which could have stepped forward and killed it in its tracks was
the Sierra Club. Instead, in familiar fashion, the Club's executive
director Carl Pope admitted later to his own board of directors that
although it was "a close judgment call," the club "did not actively try to
block (the bill's) passage, but rather put its energy into improving it."
This would be all that was needed to inch the bill past the finishing post
and the General Assembly passed it on September 1.
Oh, and the improvements? The Sierra Club suggested that the coho buffer be
expanded from 30 feet to 100 feet and from 10 to 30 feet, still far short
of the minimum guidelines.
The stage was now set for its fatal denouement, and most likely a whole
series of desperate and dangerous actions. Because of the deal finally
ratified in Washington and Sacramento, there is no room left for regulatory
inhibitions against corporate ravages. At the federal and state level,
corporations can shove through Habitat Conservation Plans that are
meaningless. The logging crews will be sent into the woods and the only
restraint left will be direct action demonstrators like Chain. There is no
alternative left.
After Chain was killed the Sierra Club board piously passed a resolution of
"outrage" against his end. The resolution was opposed by David Brower, who
told the board that the Club should look at its own shared culpability,
abandon ritual expressions of regret, cultivate "rage and get its balls
back."
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