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By Robert McClure
Seattle Post Intelligencer

The Bush administration proposed Tuesday to reduce by one-fifth the Pacific Northwest acreage protected as “critical habitat” for the spotted owl, arguing that the reductions will “maximize the efficiency” of blocks of land set aside for the imperiled bird.  Read more…

By Seattle Times staff and news services
The Seattle Times

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed to remove the “critical habitat” designation from 1.5 million acres of Northwest forests now protected for the northern spotted owl, an action that could ease logging restrictions on those lands.  Read more…

By Jeff Barnard
Houston Chronicle

GRANTS PASS, Ore. — The Bush administration Tuesday proposed cutting 1.5 million acres from Northwest forests considered critical to the survival of the northern spotted owl, reopening the 1990s battle between timber production and wildlife habitat on public lands.  Read more…

By Dominick DellaSala and Tim Cullinan
Redding Record Searchlight

The “Speak Your Piece” by Ren Lohoefener, Linda Goodman, and Ed Shepard (“Recovering the northern spotted owl: The road ahead,” May 20) is a masterpiece of government “spin” aimed at influencing public opinion. Their superficial description of the issues apparently is the Bush administration’s way of telling the public, in the words of the Great Oz, to “pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!”  Read more…

By Sam Howe Verhovek
LA Times

WONDER, ORE. — To save the northern spotted owl, federal authorities have listed the bird under the Endangered Species Act, set aside 7 million acres of forest for owl habitat, and imposed stiff fines on those who harm the chocolate-colored football-sized raptors.  Read more…

By Dr. Dominick DellaSala
Medford Mail Tribune

The guest opinion by Ren Lohoefener, Linda Goodman, and Ed Shepard (“Owl recovery a long-term undertaking,” Mail Tribune, May 21) is a masterpiece of government “spin” that unfortunately attempts to justify a flawed policy and influence the public’s opinion. Their superficial description of the issues apparently is the Bush administration’s way of telling the public, in the words of the Great Oz, to “pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!”  Read more…

By Anne Marie Distefano
The Portland Tribune

For the past year, Dominick DellaSala has been part of a 12-member team charged with creating a recovery plan for the northern spotted owl.  Read more…

By Dominick DellaSala and Tim Cullinan

 

The May 18 guest viewpoint by Ren Lohoefener, Linda Goodman and Ed Shepard, “Owl recovery a long-term undertaking,” is a masterpiece of government spin – the Bush administration’s way of telling the public, in the words of the Great Oz, to “pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!”  Read more…

By Adam Pearson
The News-Review

UMPQUA — With four distinct hoots and a box of white mice, Amy Price lures a northern spotted owl within close range of her Maglite.  Read more…

By Paul Fattig
Medford Mail Tribune

In testimony before the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee this morning, forest ecologist Dominick DellaSala of Ashland is expected to testify that politics trumped science in the Bush administration when it came to enforcing the Endangered Species Act.  Read more…

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