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The U.S. Forest Service celebrates its centennial in 2005. With a
new preface by the author, this edition of Harold K. Steen's
classic history (originally published in 1976) provides a broad
perspective on the Service's administrative and policy
controversies and successes. Steen updates the book with
discussions of a number of recent concerns, among them the spotted
owl issue; wilderness and roadless areas; new research on habitat,
biodiversity, and fire prevention; below-cost timber sales; and
workplace diversity in a male-oriented field.
The U.S. Forest Service celebrates its centennial in 2005. With a
new preface by the author, this edition of Harold K. Steen's
classic history (originally published in 1976) provides a broad
perspective on the Service's administrative and policy
controversies and successes. Steen updates the book with
discussions of a number of recent concerns, among them the spotted
owl issue; wilderness and roadless areas; new research on habitat,
biodiversity, and fire prevention; below-cost timber sales; and
workplace diversity in a male-oriented field.
Jack Ward Thomas, an eminent wildlife biologist and U.S. Forest
Service career scientist, was drafted in the late 1980s to head
teams of scientists developingstrategies for managing the habitat
of the northern spotted owl. That assignment led to his selection
as Forest Service chief during the early years of the Clinton
administration. It is history's good fortune that Thomas kept
journals of his thoughts and daily experiences, and that he is a
superb writer able to capture the moment with clarity and grace.
The issues Thomas dealt with in office and noted in his journals
lie at the heart of recent Forest Service policy and controversy,
starting with President Clinton's Timber Summit in Portland,
Oregon, dealing with the spotted owl issue, and the 1994 loss of
fourteen firefighters in the Storm King Mountain fire in Colorado.
Against a constant backdrop of partisan politics in the White House
and Congress, Thomas discusses issues ranging from grazing in the
national forests, long-term pulp timber sales in Alaska, and the
Forest Service Law Enforcement Division to the New World Mine near
Yellowstone National Park. He considers the timber salvage rider
and its linkage to forest health, the Department of Justice and
Counsel on Environmental Quality influence on Forest Service
policies, and interagency management for the Columbia River Basin.
Woven throughout these excerpts from his diary is Thomas's
conviction that the effective, ethical management of wildlife
depends on how the management effort is situated within the broader
human context, with all its intransigence and unpredictability.
Writing in 1995, Thomas says, "Things simply don't work the way
that students are taught in natural resources policy classes--not
even close. . . .There is simply no way that scholars of the
subject can understand the ad hoc processes that go on within only
loosely defined boundaries." Wildlife management, he says, is "90
percent about people and 10 percent about animals," and when it
comes to learning about people, wildlife managers are on their own.
This book is the record of how one man met that challenge.
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