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BLM shares draft resource management plan for Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument

On top of a hill, overlooking rolling hills covered in coniferous trees. There's a slight haze in the air and some patches of hills look like they've been logged recently.
Bob Wick
/
BLM
The Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument in Southern Oregon

Federal courts recently upheld the expansion of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument on the border of Oregon and California. Now, the Bureau of Land Management is working on a plan for that monument鈥檚 future.

The BLM has invited the public to learn more about several options for managing the 114,000-acre area at the intersection of the Cascade, Siskiyou and Klamath mountain ranges. The monument located on the border of Oregon and California was first created by President Bill Clinton in 2000. It was then expanded in 2017 by President Barack Obama.

Timber companies challenged that expansion, arguing the president didn鈥檛 have the power to designate a monument on Oregon and California Railroad Lands originally set aside for logging. In March, a federal appeals court upheld the expansion.

Kyle Sullivan, a spokesperson for the BLM, said the area鈥檚 new plan will offer a more overarching strategy for the monument.

鈥淧robably the biggest change is the BLM is moving from three different management plans to one management plan that covers the entire monument,鈥 said Sullivan.

There鈥檚 four options in the 600-page draft, varying by the extent to which the land will be actively managed. The BLM鈥檚 , labeled 鈥渕oderate active management,鈥 emphasizes flexibility, according to the agency. That option would reduce the amount of land managed for recreation from 9,859 acres to 431 acres. It would also decrease the area where wildfire fuels reduction is prioritized from 29,600 acres to 10,944 acres, with a focus on land .25 miles from at-risk communities.

The number of areas of critical environmental concern, which include land with important natural resources like sensitive plant species, would be reduced from five to two.

Sullivan said the agency鈥檚 preferred option recognizes the management plan already protects those areas.

鈥淭here isn鈥檛 an additional management direction needed to protect those specific areas, because those protections are already built into the management plan,鈥 said Sullivan.

Public meetings to learn more about the draft plan will be held at Klamath Community College in Klamath Falls on Thursday and Pinehurst School in the Greensprings community on Saturday. The public comment period ends on July 5th while the BLM is expected to finalize the plan this Fall.

Justin Higginbottom is a regional reporter for 老夫子传媒. He's worked in print and radio journalism in Utah as well as abroad with stints in Southeast Asia and the Middle East. He spent a year reporting on the Myanmar civil war and has contributed to NPR, CNBC and Deutsche Welle (Germany鈥檚 public media organization).