Cow Creek-Umpqua Tribe Sign Forest Service Management Plan
The Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians and the U.S. Forest Service (FS) have signed a co-stewardship agreement covering 155,000 acres in the Umpqua and Rogue River-Siskiyou national forests in southern Oregon, formalizing a government-to-government partnership focused on wildfire mitigation and forest health.
The agreement, signed in Washington, D.C., calls for coordinated landscape-scale projects to reduce wildfire risk and strengthen forest resilience. Work will be prioritized based on fire danger and potential benefits to nearby communities, wildlife, and cultural and spiritual sites important to the Cow Creek Umpqua.
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Beginnings
Way back in the 1940s my father was a local kid with smarts. Born into a farming family in Butler County, Ala., he grew up loving his family, the land, animals and hunting and fishing. He was even working his way into the timber industry: The folks running W.T. Smith Lumber in Chapman gave him a summer job learning to cruise and mark timber, and he planned to attend Auburn University and go into forestry…
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