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Missoula Chevrolet — APRIL 2024

Logging Near Whitefish Hits a Legal Roadblock

A federal judge has paused the Round Star Project due to the U.S. Forest Service’s failure to adequately protect the Canada lynx and analyze cumulative project impacts, requiring revisions before moving forward.

A federal judge in Missoula has temporarily halted the 9,000-acre Round Star Project west of Whitefish. According to a recent article via the Daily Interlake, the decision comes after a coalition of conservation groups successfully argued that the U.S. Forest Service failed to meet legal standards for protecting threatened species—specifically the Canada lynx.

While the project was intended to manage timber in the Tally Lake Ranger District, the court identified two primary reasons for the pause:

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  • Mapping Discrepancies: The Forest Service attempted to classify the area as a “wildland-urban interface,” which would allow for fewer habitat restrictions. However, Judge Kathleen DeSoto found the agency’s internal definitions of these boundaries to be inconsistent and “confusing,” making it unclear if the exemption was legally valid.
  • The “Cumulative Effects” Oversight: The court ruled that the Forest Service failed to analyze the combined impact of this project alongside the nearby 12,300-acre Cyclone Bill Project. The judge noted that the agency couldn’t view these projects in isolation given their geographical and chronological overlap.

What Happens Next?

The project isn’t dead, but it is officially on the back burner. While the court found no issues with the Forest Service’s assessment of grizzly bears, the agency must now revise its data and clarify its habitat definitions for the lynx.

Until the paperwork matches the reality on the ground, the “massive logging and roadbuilding apparatus” described by environmental groups remains on hold.

Given that the judge suggested these errors might be resolved with “minimal delay,” do you think these types of lawsuits serve as a necessary check on government agencies, or are they just a way to stall essential forest management?

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