August 10, 2005

US FOREST SERVICE, LOGGERS, RECKLESSLY ENDANGER LIVES OF NONVIOLENT PROTESTORS

On August 9th, at around one o?clock, Forest Service Law Enforcement Officers, including Officer Paul Williamson, Officer Lee Fox, and Officer G.W. Ross, made a reckless but unsuccessful attempt to forcibly remove a dedicated protestor who has been living in the tree-tops. The elaborate and unusual tree sit, known as an Upper Canopy Protection Station, stretches across multiple acres and is currently blocking logging within a unit of the Hobson old-growth reserve timber sale in the Biscuit Fire Area. hobson-sky-pod-web.jpg

A network of ropes, stretching throughout the unit slated for logging, support the platform the activist is living on. The support lines are tied into dozens of trees, preventing loggers from falling those trees as well as any trees in the area that could fall into the support lines and endanger the safety of the person living atop the platform.

However, USFS law enforcement officers, who appeared either not to comprehend the design of the structure, or not to prioritize the survival of the tree sitter, made the rash decision to disable much of the structure by haphazardly cutting vital support lines. Officer Paul Williamson was able to spur-climb a tree in which one of the anchors for the support line had been placed, then without giving warning to the young man in the platform, cut the support line, causing the platform to tip precariously.

Despite the fact that the platform tipped dangerously after having one support line disabled, Williamson, with the help of the two other officers, climbed a second tree and cut a second support line. This caused the platform to fall five feet and to tip completely vertically. At this point the young man was no longer supported by the platform, but was left dangling in the air by his backup safety line. Only after the officers cut the two life lines did they inquire whether the young man was wearing a harness and safety attachment. If the activist had not been wearing a safety device which anchored him to the tree he would have fallen off of the platform and easily could have been killed.

The man was able to reattach the safety lines to the tree and re-level the platform. Despite having his life placed in extreme danger by Forest Service the man in the platform is determined to continue his stay in the tree. After surviving the incredibly perilous situation, the young man expressed that his deep love for the forest would give him the strength to continue to put his life on the line to protect the last 5% of old-growth forests left in this country.

The Forest Service recently issued a closure order on the timber sale area and the roads leading to it, citing safety concerns as their number one rationale. Indeed, the Forest Service has created the unsafe conditions with their aggressive actions and have stood idly by while employees of Greg Liles logging company have sexually harassed, physically assaulted and threatened the lives of the peaceful protestors.

Meanwhile, the young woman suspended in the ?Sky Pod? that blocked the road leading to the sale on Monday came down on her own and escaped without arrest after loggers failed to evict her and bulldozed a make shift road around her blockade. Forest Service Law Enforcement Officers are currently combing the area searching for activists to evict from the area. Activists maintain that this closure, as well as the previous closure issued at the Fiddler sale, are unconstitutional and will be struck down by the courts as early as the end of this week. A Josephine County judge is hearing a constitutional challenge to the Fiddler closure this Friday in Grants Pass, while the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals is expected to rule any day on an Injunction Order that would halt all Biscuit logging immediately.

Posted by laurel at 02:48 PM | Comments (0) | Category(s): Biscuit Fire Campaign

August 04, 2005

Hobson Horn Hodown August 6 and 7th!

Please join the Oxygen Collective, Wild Siskiyou Action and the Sisters of the Siskiyou this weekend at the active Hobson timber sale. We will gather to strategize about our future campaign to stop Biscuit logging and and support front line activists occupying this region.

Food and supply donations are extremely appreciated.
Call Wild Siskiyou Action at (541) 659-2682 for more information.

For simple directions to the Hobson Hodown continue reading...

* From I5 take the Merlin exit--just north of Grants Pass
* Head West on the Galice Rd
you will cross the Rogue river and pass Indian Mary campground
* Left on Forest Service 25 Rd (also known as Taylor Creek Valley Rd, Briggs Rd)
* Go 10.5 miles, take a right at the juncture onto the 2510 rd
* Follow detour signs - the next juncture is about 4 m away - stay straight onto the 2402 rd
* Left after about 3 miles (just follow the detour sign towards the coast)
this is FS rd 23, on some maps it is labeled 34-8-36
* After another approximate 2 miles take a left on the 2411 rd
* Stay Right immmediately after at the Y
* Drive about 1/2 mile until you get to the first quarry. Park and honk, someone should be looking out. If you don't find anyone, hike straight up the hill.

As well, the tree-sit the original directions were posted to still exists, so you can follow the directions straight there if you want to.
Come out! Logging has begun in two different units at Hobson. We love our forest and want to protect it. If you feel the same way, we'll see you soon in the forest.

Posted by queroule at 02:02 PM | Comments (31558) | Category(s): Biscuit Fire Campaign

August 02, 2005

Oxygen Collective Collaborates with CIIS

logo.gifDuring the first week of August the Oxygen Collective is collaborating with the California Institute of Integral Studies and Boone?s Farm to bring a post graduate field course from the SF Bay Area to the Siskiyou Mountains. The O2 crew is providing transportation and guest instruction for a new course titled The Sixth Mass Extinction and Applied Deep Ecology. Twenty students are immersing in an intensive, hands-on exploration of permaculture, philosophy, natural building, ecology and animal husbandry at Boone?s Farm in the Little Applegate Valley. Garden-gate.jpg

Boone?s Farm operates the Siskiyou Crest Organic Goat Dairy, runs a revolving internship program and hosts many kinds of educational and community building events. Recent PhD graduate Blair Carter is coordinating this dynamic course with CIIS professor David Ulansey. Ulansey teaches alluring courses on philosophy and religion, and is a well-published author and speaker raising the alarm about the human generated mass extinction event now under way. He will be facilitating engaging evening discussions about the causes, implications and ethics surrounding our growing understanding of this emerging extinction event. He operates the web?s leading site of news about the sixth mass extinction at www.well.com/user/davidu/extinction.html.

Posted by laurel at 09:00 PM | Comments (0) | Category(s): o2 Friends & Family