EDITORIAL
Carving up the
forest
October 2, 2005
AFTER FIVE YEARS OF
STUDY, the U.S. Forest Service has produced a disappointing plan for the
Cleveland National Forest.
While drafting the blueprint for managing
Southern California's four national forests — Angeles, San Bernardino, Los
Padres and Cleveland — as required every 10 to 15 years under federal law,
foresters worked to balance competing interests. The plan allows increased oil
drilling in Los Padres and opens more forest la nd to off-road vehicles, even
though the Forest Service admits it cannot police the areas already open. But
protected wilderness also would increase, and off-roaders got less space than
allowed in earlier proposals.
That balance was tipped aside, though, in
the plan for Cleveland. Little of the forest was designated as wilderness
area, which means proposals for hydroelectric and transportation projects
might now go through.
That's all the worse because Cleveland is a
unique case among California's national forests. It's the smallest in the
state, and already has been reduced in size over the decades, segmented by
development into three separate islands. It straddles three large and
fast-growing counties — Orange, Riverside and San Diego.
Swaths of open
land are, of course, a temptation for nearby developers and local governments
that have run out of space and are pressed to ease traffic and other
infrastructure woes. Thus, proposals have cropped up to bu ild a dam in one of
Cleveland's most picturesque and pristine canyons, and to run a toll road —
possibly including a 12-mile tunnel that would be the second-longest in the
world — through its hills to connect Riverside County commuters to their jobs
in Orange County.
Sadly, federal foresters were under congressional
pressure to revise the plan to favor hydroelectric projects. Yet Cleveland's
size and location among three congested counties makes it all the more
important to preserve the forest for the millions of people who live less than
an hour away and who crave an oasis of greenery. This forest can ill afford to
be carved up even more.