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THE NATION
A Titan of Logging Threatens to Topple
By Tim Reiterman
Times Staff Writer
February 21, 2005
REDCREST, Calif. - Whenever Pacific Lumber Co. planned to dispatch helicopters to log its nearby redwood groves, the company would phone Christine Rising at her vine-draped bungalow above the Eel River.
After finding someone to care for her horses, dogs, cats and pot-bellied pig, Rising, 51, would pack her clothes and head down the dirt road toward a Eureka hotel about an hour's drive away. Then for days or weeks, she could escape the beat of helicopter blades that she says wreak havoc with her surgically repaired left ear, causing nausea, dizziness and even blackouts.
For Pacific Lumber, paying Rising's hotel bills for a few years was a cost of doing business - a relatively inexpensive goodwill gesture by a company that could ill afford more enemies or more obstacles to harvesting its valuable Humboldt County timberlands.
But early last year, Rising says, she had to start fending for herself. Although Pacific Lumber says it will help her out with her medical expenses, it has stopped paying to relocate her.
For Rising, who lives on an $850-a-month government disability payment, the development was a heartless move by one of California's most powerful natural resource companies. But it also was one more sign that a company that has been a pillar of California's north coast economy for nearly a century and a half is in trouble.
A series of layoffs and mill closures culminated earlier this year with Pacific Lumber warning that it was on the brink of bankruptcy.
Company executives began negotiating with a state agency last week over 11 logging permits that they say are crucial to the firm's survival.
Catherine Kuhlman, executive director of the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board, said the final decision on the permits wouldn't be issued until later this week, after the public has had a chance to comment.
The demise of Pacific Lumber - with its own town and the world's largest privately owned groves of ancient redwoods - would strike Humboldt County like a 300-foot redwood toppling to the forest floor.
Pacific Lumber remains the biggest taxpayer and private employer, with friends and former employees in key places in county government and the state Capitol. The company supports charities and community affairs - and offers college scholarships to employees' children.
Since the early 1990s, Pacific Lumber has been at the center of one of the country's longest and most volatile environmental battles over the fate of some of the world's tallest trees and the wildlife they support.
To end the strife, six years ago, the state and federal governments made a $480-million deal for 7,500 acres of Pacific Lumber's oldest, grandest trees, creating the new Headwaters Preserve. The deal also required the firm to limit logging on its remaining 200,000 acres. But now the company contends that the terms are a huge financial burden and that it can't get enough logging permits to turn a profit.
"We're 140 years old ? and we're about to go bankrupt because of overlapping and duplicative regulation," company President Robert Manne said in a recent interview.
Company officials warn that if they have to declare bankruptcy, monitoring and remedial work on its lands would be dramatically scaled back, to the detriment of wildlife and water quality. But state officials say that terms of the agreement would have to be followed no matter what.
Environmentalists and other critics argue that the company has only itself to blame for its difficulties. They point out that financier Charles Hurwitz, whose Texas-based Maxxam Corp. acquired Pacific Lumber in a contentious takeover in 1985, soon liquidated hundreds of millions of dollars in assets, including a welding division and a farming corporation.
"They have taken so much money out of the company and their debt is so high that without the logs ? they are hurting," said Richard Wilson, who was former Gov. Pete Wilson's forestry chief when negotiations for the Headwaters deal were underway.
Under Hurwitz, Pacific doubled logging volumes, spawning years of costly protests by activists who blocked logging roads and perched in trees to prevent them from being cut. There have been hundreds of arrests, numerous injuries and one death.
Since the mid-1990s, a number of Pacific Lumber's neighbors have contended that excessive logging along steep slopes has triggered landslides, filled streams with sediment and flooded their property.
Before the 1999 Headwaters deal, the California Department of Forestry suspended the company's license for repeated forest rules violations.
"When Maxxam took over, they waved a red flag at the bull, and said we would do it our way," said opponent Woody Murphy, whose family had owned Pacific Lumber for decades before the takeover.
The company "is a mess, and whether it's the endgame, I would not be surprised," said lawyer Bill Bertain, who tried to block the Maxxam takeover and has sued Pacific Lumber over damage to residents' homes, orchards and water supplies. "But it's a sad thing. A lot of my buddies are on edge, worried about working."
In recent years, Pacific Lumber has closed three mills and cut its workforce of 1,700 almost in half. Company officials said they now want to sell employees and retirees the 275 homes Pacific Lumber owns in the tidy mill town of Scotia.
Last year, in a blow to its reputation, the company poured more than $200,000 into a losing effort to recall the county district attorney. The prosecutor had filed a $250-million civil fraud suit against the company over the Headwaters deal, alleging it had submitted false data on landslide dangers in logging areas. The company denies the allegation, and the case is pending.
In addition to saving some of the most majestic trees, the Headwaters deal sought to protect salmon that spawn in the forest's streams, northern spotted owls that nest in its trees and 15 other species.
Despite misgivings by some company officials, Pacific Lumber hoped the pact would finally bring peace - and steady profits. But executives now say the company has been losing $28 million to $98 million a year since 1999 - largely because of the cost of complying with the Headwaters deal, difficulties in obtaining logging permits and millions of dollars in legal expenses.
Pacific Lumber said it has spent about $65 million complying with the habitat conservation plan and has expanded its staff of scientists from eight to 52.
Much of the company's environmental protection effort has been devoted to two adjoining watersheds outside Eureka - Freshwater Creek and Elk River - where residents say that sediment has washed off heavily logged slopes, choking streams and causing frequent flooding.
Jerry Gess, a retired mechanic, lives behind what some people jokingly call "The Great Wall of Freshwater." He built the 6-foot high cinderblock structure around his house in 2003 after the creek came within inches of his front door. The house was built on high ground by his grandparents, but since Pacific Lumber increased upstream logging, he said, the creek filled with silt, not the gravel that spawning salmon need. Swimming holes, he said, became just a memory.
"I'm not totally against Pacific Lumber," said Gess, who joined a lawsuit against the company. "But Charles Hurwitz has one thing on his mind: to make money at any cost. We're all caught in this thing."
The company maintains that most downstream sediment is from "legacy logging" several years ago or longer. And its scientists say silting has declined since the Headwaters agreement, despite continuing resident complaints and numerous forest rules violations.
On a recent tour, Jeff Barrett, head of Pacific Lumber's science division, pointed out road repairs and new logging practices that the company says have helped prevent erosion and preserve wildlife. "There is a beautiful clear-cut with slash," he said, pointing to a stand of logged trees. "The birds have perches.''
Pacific Lumber wants to do more logging in the area and says it has spent $2 million to winterize dirt roads to minimize washouts. But the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board has been holding up the permits, because officials feared the company's logging could dump more sediment in waterways.
Last week, the company and the board held marathon negotiations over 11 proposed logging areas that the company says hold 38% of its projected harvest for the first half of this year.
"I think we can make a deal that will keep Pacific in business and protect the residents," Kuhlman, the board's director, said Friday. "But the devil's in the details."
Chuck Center, Pacific Lumber's legislative director, said there was a potential agreement for some of the permits, but that it was not clear where that would leave the company's finances.
The permit holdup, coming on top of Pacific Lumber's warnings of insolvency, has not helped the company's already low financial ratings or its ability to make payments on bonds used to refinance Maxxam's $900-million purchase. It still owes $750 million.
Despite the bankruptcy warnings, Manne, who took over as Pacific Lumber's president three years ago, says he believes it is strong enough to survive. "The company is well-managed, well-run and we have an experienced team," he said. "We hope we can get it back to the level of respect it deserves."
Last summer, Pacific Lumber opened a high-tech $30-million sawmill, which cuts small logs up to 2 feet in diameter. It was the company's way of adjusting to the increasing scarcity of big trees in a forest logged for more than a century.
Meanwhile, officials said they were trying to raise $100 million to acquire more timberland - and are willing to sell a piece of the company.
Dennis Wood, vice president of operations, said the timber shortage was forcing the company to run two shifts per day - instead of three - at its mills. "We're cutting faster than we can bring logs in," he said.
Rafael Lopez, one of 38 mill workers laid off Jan. 17 and later rehired, worries about putting his three children through college and losing his company housing. "If we don't get more logs, next time it will be a lot more than 38 of us," he said.
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives.
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times
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http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-timber21feb21,0,6487993.story?coll=la-home-headlines
More Updates - Pacific Lumber Bankruptcy Update
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2008-04-11 redwoods Humboldt MAXXAM Mendocino MRC PALCO reorganization proposals - Pacific Lumber Bankruptcy, Bohemian Grove Redwoods and Berkeley Oaks
2008-04-05 redwoods oaks Pacific Lumber bankruptcy MAXXAM Humboldt Berkeley - Bankruptcy in the Redwoods, Urban Tree Sit & Great Music
2008-03-07 BACH, Pacific Lumber, MAXXAM, Gary Gates, Funky Nixons, UC Berkeley - Update on Pacific Lumber and Berkeley Oaks
2008-01-03 Headwaters redwoods MAXXAM tree sitters forest defense Humboldt - Grandmothers for the Oaks
2007-12-12 Berkeley Oaks redwoods BACH forest grandmother - Forest Benefit Auction with Food and Music
2007-11-25 Berkeley oaks redwoods humboldt BACH benefit auction forest - Oaks Grove Alert
2007-10-30 Berkeley Oaks treesitters court sports training police headwaters - Pacific Lumber Reorganization and Berkeley Oaks
2007-10-03 Humboldt redwoods Berkeley oaks Pacific Lumber bankruptcy - Berkeley Oaks & Buffalo Field Campaign
2007-09-03 redwoods oaks buffalo berkeley yellowstone ashkenaz - Jackson State Forest
2007-06-25 Jackson State Forest, Old Growth, Clear Cuts, Redwoods - Oak Grove & Transitions
2007-06-22 Oak Grove, Country Joe Macdonald, Kent Stromsmoe, Hal Carlstad, Redwoods - Forest Alert and Update
2007-05-16 Pacific Lumber, bankruptcy, Judi Bari, Endangered Oaks, Marbled Murrelet - Bankruptcy, Oaks & Earth Day
2007-04-05 redwoods, Pacific Lumber, MAXXAM, Earth Day, Berkeley Oaks, Humboldt - Stomp the Stumps
2007-03-10 redwoods benefit music Berkeley oaks Ashkenaz - Forest benefit at Ashkenaz 3/16: Stomp the Stumps!
2007-03-09 WORKINGMAN'S ED, the FUNKY NIXONS and the GARY GATES BAND Forest benefit at Ashkenaz 3/16: Stomp the Stumps! - Upcoming events tree-huggers and forest activists will want to know about
2007-02-23 forest activist pacific lumber berkeley oak tree sit klamath - Forest Update
2007-02-14 pacific lumber oak tree sit berkeley - Pacific Lumber Files for Bankruptcy
2007-01-19 Pacific Lumber Files Bankruptcy Headwaters Preserve - Update on Pacific Lumber and Berkeley Oaks
2007-01-03 Headwaters redwoods MAXXAM bankruptcy tree sitters forest defense - Update on Pacific Lumber and Berkeley Oaks
2007-01-03 Headwaters redwoods MAXXAM treesitters forest defense - Visit the Oak Tree-Sit in Berkeley!
2006-12-11 oak tree-sit berkeley earth first! oak woodland ucb - INVITATION - Please join us to celebrate ACTIVISM at our gala event
2006-11-14 Forest Activist Event Berkeley La Pena Auction - Letters Alert: Endangered Marbled Murrelet Habitat
2006-10-05 endangered marbled murrelet US Fish and Wildlife critical habitat Comment letter redwood forest - Misty Redwood Run
2006-09-06 misty redwood run 10K fun run - buffalo field campaign roadshow
2006-09-05 Buffalo Field Campaign
7th Generation Rise
- Giant Sequoia Alert
2006-08-30 giant sequoia logging
- Pacific Lumber pres. Robert Manne Resigns
2006-07-26 pacific lumber robert manne resigns - Protest Corporate Lobby meeting in SF!
2006-07-17 Protest corporate lobby American Legislative Exchange Council in San Francisco - Corporate SLAPP suits Against Forest Protesters Begin
2006-03-07 SLAPP suit pacific lumber protester - We cover Hurwitz on Free Speech TV
2006-03-01 Free Speech TV's weekly news magazine, focusing on
social justice issues - St. Patrick's Day Benefit: Stomp the Stumps at Ashkenaz
2006-03-01 forest benefit ashkenaz - Message from a Tree Sitter
2006-02-14 pacific lumber old growth nanning creek treesitter - Pacific Lumber Plans to Sell Up to 60,000 acres
2006-02-12 pacific lumber land sale maxxam headwaters - North Coast Forest Update
2006-01-18 Redwoods on radio Hurwitz DeLay Pombo Abramoff Nanning old growth - Logging of Nanning Creek Old Growth
2005-12-13 Nanning Creek Redwoods Marbled Murrelet Humboldt Maxxam - Protest at Senator Feinstein's Office
2005-12-02 Nanning Creek Redwoods Senator Feinstein Emergency Rally - Action Update and Strategy Meeting
2005-11-29 Nanning Creek Ancient Redwood Forest Bonanza Logging Plan - Forest Activist Get-together and Call to Action
2005-11-23 Redwoods Call to Action and Activists Get-together San Francisco Bay Area - Benefit Concert & Silent Auction with Dana Lyons
2005-11-09 Benefit Concert and Silent Auction for the Redwoods with Dana Lyons - Misty Redwood Run
2005-10-14 Misty Redwoods Run. 10K fun run. Redwood Park Oakland. - Endangered Species Act (ESA) Under Attack
2005-09-27 Alert re Pombo Bill to gut the Endangered Species Act, or ESA - pending legislation in Congress to weaken environmental protection - Important Hearing Regarding Headwaters Forest - 9/16 San Francisco
2005-09-14 In 1999 the state and federal government completed a deal with the Pacific Lumber Company to purchase roughly 7,500 acres of Headwaters Forest in Humboldt County near Eureka - Water Board's Sept. hearing in Fortuna
2005-08-29 Water Board's Sept. hearing in Fortuna Palco's Watershed-wide Waste Discharge Requirements permits for Freshwater and Elk River
- Bad News from Texas: Judge Gives Millions to Hurwitz; New Campaign to End Clear Cutting
2005-08-24 federal judge issued an order for the FDIC to pay Charles Hurwitz up to $72 million, sanctioning the federal agency for its lawsuits against Hurwitz.
CAMPAIGN TO FIGHT CLEAR CUTTING - Update on Maxxam manipulations
2005-08-02 Maxxam Corp. has offered terms to the bondholders of its financially troubled timber company, Pacific Lumber subsidiary Scotia Pacific, various stakeholders have focused their attention on discussions - Comment on Limits on Logging Proposal
2005-07-28 Comment on Limits on Logging Proposal - Maxxam/PL (Scotia Pacific) barely avoids bankruptcy
2005-07-19 Maxxam/PL (Scotia Pacific) barely avoids bankruptcy - Please Comment: Endangered Habitat On the Chopping Block
2005-06-27 Charles Hurwitz Maxxam Pacific Lumber State Water Quality Control Board from logging his desired volume of trees in the Elk River and Freshwater Creek watersheds - Water Board hearing tomorrow, old growth hikes, other news re. Pacific Lumber
2005-06-15 REMINDER--
- Forest Update
2005-03-30 Water Board caves to PL pressure despite rivers of evidence
Pepper Spray by Q-tip civil rights trial nears, trial-related events in Bay Area
Forest activist get-together next week (April 7)
Day of Action for forests at Victoria's Secret April 14
- Hearing re. PL logging before Water Board CHANGED
2005-03-15 March 10, we alerted this list regarding the Wednesday, March 16 North Coast Regional - Big Timber's Last Stand. PL vs. Water Board
2005-03-14 Latest Tree War Pits Pacific Lumber's Logging Plan Against an
- Public hearing on Maxxam/PL logging MARCH 16
2005-03-11 The hearing will begin at 9 am. Come early to get a seat!
We recommend being there by 8 am. See http://www.waterboards.ca.gov/northcoast - Water Board OKs Fifty Percent of PL's Logging in Disputed Watersheds
2005-02-26 Water Board OKs 50 percent of PL's Logging in Disputed Watersheds - Pls. comment: SPI proposes giant clearcut in old growth
2005-02-18 comment SPI proposes giant clearcut in old growth - article on Maxxam/PL
2005-02-18 Eureka
Reporter, an interview with the president of the Humboldt Watershed
Council. - Eureka Reporter on Palco
2005-02-10 North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board, and separately with PALCO's bank lender - Maxxam tries extortion to get logging approved-Letters needed
2005-01-31 Maxxam/Pacific Lumber Tries to Extort More Logging Plans
at Top Levels of State Government - Protect endangered Forests and Wildlife. Comments Needed by February 1
2005-01-25 timber industry's American Forest & Paper Association (AF&PA) Green Building Council AF&PA's "business as usual" Sustainable Forestry Initiative - MATTOLE TREE-SITTERS' GEAR BURNED. DEFENDERS NEED YOUR SUPPORT
2005-01-13 Mattole tree-sits are in a logging plan (THP 1-03-235-"Foxtrot") in the upper Rattlesnake Creek drainage - Pacific Lumber Poised to Log Ancient Redwoods Adjacent to Avenue of the Giants
2004-11-20 Timber Harvest Plan (1-04-220 HUM)Logging Forest Redwood - 2nd annual Silent Auction and Celebration of Forest Activism
2004-11-19 auction forest headwaters - PL & state ordered to pay $6 million on SYP case
2004-09-30 Pacific Lumber pay 6 million on SYP case headwaters - Ancient Redwoods on Gypsy Mt. Cut by PL - 4 arrested
2004-09-27
Ancient Redwood Trees Cut On Gypsy Mountain
Tree Sitters Extracted; Four Arrested
- Pepper Spray By Q-Tip Trial Ends in Jury Deadlock
2004-09-23 Pepper Spray By Q-Tip Trial Ends in Jury Deadlock - Pepper Spray Trial delayed ONE DAY
2004-09-02 Pepper Spray Trial delayed ONE DAY - Headwaters pepper spray trial coming (back) to SF
2004-08-20 Humboldt county sheriff deputies forced pepper spray into the eyes of non-violent Headwaters Forest activists with Q-tips
- A BILL TO PROTECT CALIFORNIA'S OLD-GROWTH TREES IS STUCK IN A
2004-08-16 SB 754, the Heritage Tree Preservation Act, will permanently protect
the last of California's old-growth trees on nonfederal land,
including Coast redwoods, Douglas-firs and Giant sequoias. Less than
one percent of these ancient giants remain, yet they are still being
logged. This bill will protect these trees - Letters needed on Ancient Tree bill
2004-07-26 Letters needed on Ancient Tree bill Urge the Assembly Appropriations Committee to Approve SB 754 - Ancient Tree bill passes committee!
2004-06-15 Ancient Tree bill sb754 Assembly Natural Resources Committee - Urgent alert on old growth bill--please act
2004-06-11 Assembly Natural Resources
Committee will vote on the Heritage Tree Preservation Act SB 754 - AN ALERT ON THE ANCIENT TREES LEGISLATION
2004-03-25 The Heritage Tree Preservation Act is alive and kicking! We have never been so close to protecting California's old-growth trees, but we need your help to make it a reality! Please join us in Sacramento on Wednesday, April 14th for Old-Growth Lobby Day. You can sign up at www.ancienttrees.org. - FOREST BENEFIT Mark your calendars for FRIDAY APRIL 2...and we aren't fooling!
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2004-03-11 Citizen lawsuits have halted logging for the last 4 years. Now, we are on the verge of permanently protecting Jackson State Forest - The people spoke! Maxxam did not succeed in booting the District Attorney of Humboldt county out of office in a very dirty recall campaign.
2004-03-04 Gallegos Headwaters Forest Palco Maxxam Corp recall.
- Increased harassment of Humboldt DA-second break-in at his house
2004-02-23 Pacific Lumber and their spooks step up the campaign against the DA who is trying to bring them to justice
- News Alert from the Redwoods
2004-02-06 Maxxam's Pacific Lumber is financing 93 percent of the campaign to recall Humboldt County (CA) District Attorney Paul Gallegos in the last reporting period. D.A. Gallegos filed a $250 million lawsuit against Pacific Lumber, alleging fraud - Tree-sitter at State Capitol in Sacramento lobbies for bill
2004-02-05 A man named Bear climbed a tree outside the California State Capitol today to raise awareness for SB 754, the Heritage Tree Act, which has been held up by the State Assembly's Natural Resources Committee. - Challenge to Pacific Lumber's recall campaign needs support
2004-01-22 This is an alert about the outrageous recall effort underway, largely financed by Maxxam/Pacific Lumber to oust the Humboldt county District Attorney Paul Gallegos, who filed a fraud legal case against PL a number of months ago. (See story in our last newsletter, on our website, for background). - Jackson State Forest needs your letters NOW!
2004-01-21 California state law now says that Jackson State Forest shall be logged for maximum timber production! This must be changed if our public forest is to be saved for our children! - MAXXAM AND PACIFIC LUMBER'S BANKROLLING OF DISTRICT ATTORNEY RECALL
2003-02-25 Houston-based Maxxam Corp., parent company of Pacific Lumber Co., this week put another $75,000 into the recall of District Attorney Paul Gallegos.
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