PRESS
RELEASE
December
11, 2000
The
Pacific Forest Trust and Mendocino Redwood Company Collaborate
to Save Comptche Hill Forest
Comptche,
CA Ninety
acres of mature redwood and fir forest that form the scenic
backdrop to the town of Comptche will be protected forever
by a new conservation easement, the non-profit Pacific Forest
Trust announced. Residents of this small community in southwestern
Mendocino County have worked for years to spare the hillside
from potential development or over-logging.
The Mendocino Redwood
Company (MRC), which owns the forestland, has donated the easement
to the Pacific Forest Trust (PFT), a non-profit organization
dedicated to preserving private forests. The easement ensures
full protection of the forest; under the terms of the easement
virtually no timber harvest is allowed and development is prohibited.
"This easement
represents the culmination of many years of co-operation and
hard work by the Comptche community as well as the fulfillment
of MRCs commitment to the people of Mendocino," said
PFT President Laurie Wayburn. "Its a great gift to
the future of this community."
Judy Garratt, a Comptche
resident and Executive Director of the Comptche Land Conservancy,
and other local residents have been seeking formal protection
of the forestland above their town since 1987. "I have been
afraid to breathe, its been taking so long," said
Garrett.
The forest lies along
the Albion River, an important salmon stream that drains directly
into the Pacific. It has not been logged since the early 1900s
and contains large diameter, second growth redwood and Douglas
fir as well as scattered old growth components.
"The hill is wildlife
habitat. Its very steep. Its within the downtown
Comptche viewshed, and within view of the school and the church," Garratt
said. "It pretty well is downtown Comptche."
Garratt commended the
current property owner, Mendocino Redwood Company, which purchased
the land from Louisiana Pacific Corp. after LP explored the process
of establishing the conservation easement. "From the very
beginning Sandy Dean (MRC president) was interested in meeting
with us and finding out what had been done in the past, what
we were looking for, and finding a way to accommodate the community," Garratt
said.
A conservation easement
permanently restricts specified activities on a given piece of
property and stays with the property regardless of the propertys
owner. MRCs decision to grant the easement, therefore,
ensures the land is protected forever.
"We have been honored
to work with the people of Comptche and the Pacific Forest Trust
in completing the permanent preservation of the Comptche Hill
with this easement. Due to its proximity to the town of Comptche,
it is one of the most unique areas in our forest " said
Sandy Dean, Chairman of MRC.
The Pacific Forest Trust,
partnering with the Comptche Land Conservancy, first began work
on the easement six years ago. PFTs mission is "enhancing,
restoring, and preserving the private, productive forests of
the Pacific Northwest." Founded in 1993, the PFT has a staff
of 12 and maintains offices in Santa Rosa and Boonville, California,
and in Seattle, Washington.
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