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Massachusetts loggers to state: 'Real tough time' with no contracts. Others want forests preserved.

A view through the trees at Skinner State Park in South Hadley, Massachusetts.
Nancy Eve Cohen
/
NEPM
A view through the trees at Skinner State Park in South Hadley, Massachusetts.

The Massachusetts Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs said it will "soon" issue a plan to incorporate recommendations from a committee of scientists on how to steward state forests to address climate change.

The Climate Forestry Committee released a state-commissioned report in early January that analyzed how to manage state-owned forests to help Massachusetts meet its greenhouse gas emissions limit of net zero by 2050. Trees remove carbon from the atmosphere through photosynthesis, and then store it.

When the report was issued, the environmental office said it was ending a year-long pause on new logging contracts on state land and would put out new forestry projects to bid by spring.

But Chris Egan, from the Massachusetts Forest Alliance, said no new harvesting projects have gone out to bid since the end of 2022. He said the only state-issued invitation to bid was for removal of a pile of previously cut wood in the Wachusett Reservoir Watershed.

Egan said loggers are suffering and the loss of state contracts has taken a toll on small logging businesses that are a key part of the rural economy.

"Our hope is there'll be a lot of projects released and that people can start working again. Because it's been a real tough time for timber harvesters in Massachusetts," Egan said.

The state said it is reviewing projects to see how they align with the committee's recommendations.

Janet Sinclair works with Save Massachusetts Forests, a project of RESTORE: The North Woods. She said her group wants the state to address climate change and biodiversity by leaving state forests alone.

"We're hoping going forward is that there's much less logging on state land, that much more land is put into reserves and that the these reserves are made permanent," Sinclair said.

In a statement the state Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs thanked the public and the Climate Forestry Committee for the recommendations and said, "...we are dedicated to incorporating this input on how climate change should be reflected in our work and providing a consistent and predictable framework for state land management that recognizes all our important values and uses of forest land."

The agency did not give an exact date for sharing a detailed work plan, but said it is looking forward to doing so soon.

Nancy Eve Cohen is a former NEPM senior reporter whose investigative reporting has been recognized with an Edward R. Murrow Regional Award for Hard News, along with awards for features and spot news from the Public Media Journalists Association (PMJA), American Women in Radio & Television and the Society of Professional Journalists.

She has reported on repatriation to Native nations, criminal justice for survivors of child sexual abuse, linguistic and digital barriers to employment, fatal police shootings and efforts to address climate change and protect the environment. She has done extensive reporting on the EPA's Superfund cleanup of the Housatonic River.

Previously, she served as an editor at NPR in Washington D.C., as well as the managing editor of the Northeast Environmental Hub, a collaboration of public radio stations in New York and New England.

Before working in radio, she produced environmental public television documentaries. As part of a camera crew, she also recorded sound for network television news with assignments in Russia, Guatemala, Mexico, Cuba and in Sarajevo during the war in Bosnia.