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Building Bridges of Understanding

Jim Petersen, Editor, Evergreen Magazine, February, 1990

 

The Decade of the Environment is upon us, and if we are to believe the statistics, well over half of all Americans now believe their forest heritage is being destroyed by giant timber companies that care little for the environment and mostly for the almighty dollar.

It would be easy to blame environmental groups for the precipitous decline in public confidence in forestry, but nothing good would come of it. Besides, there are other deeper meanings that must be understood first before public confidence in forestry can be restored. Of these meanings, none poses a greater threat to the nation’s future than the cultural gap that now distances rural America from its cities.

We have become a nation of city dwellers a generation or two removed from our distant rural heritage. There is little about city life that hints of where things come from or where America began. There are no sawmills in San Francisco, no silver mines in Chicago and no wheat fields in New York City. Nothing in the city reminds us of small rural communities like Libby, Montana, Wallace, Idaho, Forks, Washington, Hay Fork, California or Klamath Falls, Oregon. These are small out-of-the way places where loggers, miners and farmers shape America’s building blocks. But because nothing about city life leads back to rural roots, city dwellers know very little about these building blocks or where they come from.

                      Crossing a stream on Westvaco timberland in West Virginia.  Westvaco's fine forests are profiled in the upcoming issue of Evergreen, scheduled for publication in late July.

 

The same can probably be said for most of us. Rarely, if ever, do we make the connection between loggers and the countless homes that shelter this nation of 280 million. We break bread three times a day, but give no thought to America’s farmers and ranchers. We fly at the speed of sound and compute at the speed of light, but know nothing of miners who toil for precious metals in the bowels of the Earth. We travel from coast to coast on ribbons of concrete, never stopping think about the aggregate industry that paved the way, not just for the movement of goods and services, but also for ideas and people.

Not surprisingly, we have become the richest nation on Earth, but in ever increasing numbers, we have absolutely no idea where our wealth comes from or what it takes to acquire it. Worse yet, we do not know the people who bring us these riches in such abundance. If more of us knew more of them, we would probably view logging, farming, ranching and mining in a more favorable light. There would still be concern for the environment, but it would be tempered by the reality that even the essentials of life come at a price.

Most Americans care deeply about the environment, but I doubt many would be willing to surrender their job or the comforts of life in the name of spotted owl protection, wetland’s preservation or biological diversity. Nevertheless, these are the directions in which America is headed. Before we travel too far down this road, the nation’s resource-based industries need to build some bridges of understanding linking rural America’s producers with urban America’s consumers. Imagine the enormous political and cultural strength of common understanding - of links that tie producers to consumers, big cities to small towns. Imagine how much better things would be if consumers actually knew something about land and natural resource management and what it takes to feed, clothe and shelter this nation on a daily basis.

The best way to build these bridges of understanding is to replicate the sister city model that has been used so successfully to join people from distant lands in bonds of common understanding and shared ideals. What better way to bridge the increasingly divisive gap that now distances urban America from its rich rural heritage?

Until these bridges of understanding are in place, the nation’s forest, farming and mining communities will continue to drift from economic crisis to economic crisis, from one cobbled-together congressional fix to the next. It is no way to live.

 

   L  I  N  K  S

 

WEB DESIGN/HOSTING & ON LINE SERVICES:
Forest Industry On Line

INDUSTRY ASSOCIATIONS:
APA: The Engineered Wood Association

Intermountain Forestry Association

Montana Logging Association

Potlatch Corporation

American Forest Resource Council

Virginia Forestry Association

Forest Resources Association

Western Wood Products Association
Canadian Plywood Association

FORESTRY EDUCATION/CONSULTING:
Idaho Forest Products Commission
Oregon Logging Conference

Pacific Logging Congress

Society of American Foresters

University of Washington, College of Forest Resources, Landscape Management

Forest Communications
 
MEI Productions (Photography & Video)

Western Wood Preservers Institute (Treated Wood Information)

California Forest Products Commission

Tom Bonnicksen, PhD, Forest Ecologist

California Licensed Foresters Association
Virginia's Sustainable Forestry Initiative Program
Advanced Forestry

The Forest Products Society
Montana Tree Farm System

ADVANCEMENTS IN HARVESTING TECHNOLOGY:
Caterpillar Inc./ Forest Products

Timberjack Inc.


NEWS SERVICE/COMMENTARY:
CNS News

The Pulaski Project

POLITICAL COMMENTARY:
The Right Republic

FARMING/RANCHING:
Siskiyou County Farm Bureau

Klamath Basin Water Crisis

POLICY RESEARCH:
The Heartland Institute

The Political Economy Research Center (PERC)

TIMBER/LUMBER/FOREST PRODUCTS:
Herbert Lumber Co.
Hawkins & Associates (Timber Consulting)
Hampton Affiliates

GRASS ROOTS:
Treekeepers

Oregon Sportsmen's Defense Fund, Inc.

Montanans for Multiple Use

Greening Earth Society

Pulp and Paperworkers' Resource Council
Northeast Regional Forest Foundation
Idaho Women In Timber
Ruffed Grouse Society

 

Evergreen Magazine
P.O. Box 1290, Bigfork, MT. 59911
Tel:
(406) 837-0966 Fax: (406) 837-1385
Email:  jim@evergreenmagazine.com