LIFE & CULTURE
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It costs nothing to leave our trees as they are

Biden should take all steps available to stop commercial logging on federal land

    • Great Smoky Mountains National Park, US: The future of America's national forests is being shaped now.
    • Great Smoky Mountains National Park, US: The future of America's national forests is being shaped now. Pixabay
    Published Fri, Aug 26, 2022 · 08:00 AM

    MY CAREER as a songwriter began in Manhattan, not far from where I was born. When I moved to Los Angeles in 1968, I became part of the singer-songwriter community that coalesced around Laurel Canyon. I thought California would be wild in the sense of nature. It turned out to be wild in the sense of drugs and parties. I wanted to live close to the kind of wild nature that must exist somewhere on a large scale. Somewhere turned out to be Idaho.

    In 1977 I moved to a mobile home on Robie Creek, a 40-minute drive from Boise. For the next three years I lived in the backcountry northeast of McCall in a cabin with no running water or electricity. After that I lived adjacent to the Salmon River for 38 years, with a national forest as my nearest neighbour.

    The future of America’s national forests is being shaped now. The Biden administration is developing a system to inventory old-growth and mature forests on federal land that the president wants to be completed by next April. But given the immediate threats facing many of these forests and their importance to slowing climate change, bold action is required immediately to preserve not just old-growth and mature trees but entire national forest ecosystems comprising thousands of interdependent species.

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