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Charges dismissed against activists who tried to block 2019 shipment at Port of Vancouver Published: July 22, 2021, 5:53pm Share: Protesters with the activist groups Mosquito Fleet and Portland Rising Tide attempted to block a ship from docking at the Port of Vancouver to offload oil pipe supplies on Nov. 5, 2019. Criminal charges against four of the climate activists have been dropped. (Courtesy of Trip Jennings/Mosqui) Criminal charges against four climate activists who attempted to block a shipment of parts for an oil pipeline at the Port of Vancouver in November 2019 were dismissed Wednesday in Clark County District Court. The activists from Oregon’s Portland Rising Tide – Kelsey Baker, Mike Hastie, Samantha Krop and Bruce Watt – were charged with criminal trespass and failure to disperse. ....
As state officials finalize plans to log around 3,000 acres of state forest burned in the Santiam Canyon fires, both conservation and timber groups have expressed frustration with the number of trees on the chopping block. A post-wildfire plan for Santiam State Forest looks to remove hazard trees along roadways and recover some economic value through 11 timber sales of burned trees totaling 56.2 million board feet in 2021. The chance to comment on the plan ends Tuesday. The easiest way to comment is emailing: [email protected]. A map of proposed timber sales, located primarily east of Salem, can be found here: https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/71b6681f422946a2968eacf350522ab7 ....
Originally published on February 2, 2021 5:45 pm The letter was signed by 38 conservation groups including the Native Fish Society, Sierra Club and Oregon Wild. Together they’re urging Oregon’s elected officials to halt proposed logging projects on about 10,000 acres of federal lands. The letter singles out areas that burned during the Holiday Farm Fire along the McKenzie River and Archie Creek Fire along the North Umpqua River. “These post-fire projects do remove most of the remaining standing trees, especially in severely burned areas,” says Samantha Krop, who helped organize the coalition. “That’s where we see real clear-cut looking forests is in some of these stands that have burned more thoroughly.” ....