The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will help train Department of Natural Resources (DNR) employees and monitor the agency's forest management to address long-simmering conflict over logging on state hunting lands acquired with millions of dollars in federal aid, according an agreement announced Thursday.
Fish and Wildlife Service Regional Director Charlie Wooley and DNR Commissioner Sarah Strommen told the Star Tribune that they struck a five-point management agreement this week. They described it as a collaborative path forward from discord over a major change in DNR logging called the Sustainable Timber Harvest Initiative.
The Star Tribune reported on the expanded logging program and related conflicts in late October.
The stepped-up logging program grew from a request by the state's forest products industry for DNR to expand timber offerings. In July 2019, not long after the computer-based plan kicked in, 28 DNR wildlife managers openly ripped it as an unlawful sellout to an industry that was harmful to wildlife habitat and wasteful of dollars collected from the sporting public. Their boss, DNR Fish and Wildlife Division Director Dave Olfelt, has continued to defend the new timber program, saying it doesn't sacrifice wildlife habitat for cordage targets.
Some of the rank-and-file complaints were validated eight months later when two federal wildlife biologists in Wooley's administration monitored logging activity at three of Minnesota's largest wildlife management areas (WMAs). According to a central finding in their report, DNR's Forestry Division appeared to be implementing timber harvests "primarily to meet commercial timber objectives.'' The report said DNR's Fish and Wildlife Division seemed to have little oversight of the cuttings despite legal requirements for any type of forest management on the wildlife lands to primarily benefit wildlife.
"Ultimately, it appears that Forestry controls forest management and timber sales on these WMAs,'' the report said.
The monitoring report said DNR "might lack compliance'' with seven laws and regulations, including the federal Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act that provides millions of dollars annually to the DNR to acquire and manage public hunting lands. Instead of enhancing wildlife habitat, some of the observed sites were logged to the detriment of critters and hunters, the report said.
Wooley said DNR is not penalized under the new agreement, nor does the pact require the DNR to lower the cordage goals managed by its Forestry Division. Rather, he and Strommen said terms of the agreement are intended to reaffirm and emphasize how logging and other forest management practices must be carried out to achieve wildlife-first tenets inherent in accepting federal aid.