10 Year Report for the Northwest Forest Plan
Related Information
Tribal Effectiveness Monitoring
This web site provides access to that portion of the 10 year interpretive report devoted to tribal issues. This portion of the report provides analyses from 15 interviews with tribes residing within the boundaries of the Northwest Forest Plan(the Plan) and answers the following:
- For those trust resources identified in treaties with American Indians, what are their conditions and trends?
- Are sites of religious and cultural heritage adequately protected?
- Do American Indians have access to and use of forest species, resources, and places important for cultural, subsistence, or economic reasons, particulary those identified in treaties?
For the complete report and supporting data, please peruse this web site.
Final Report
The status and trends and synthesis reports are available as a series of reports called general technical reports (GTR’s) by the Pacific Northwest Research Station. To date, the final tribal report has received extensive technical reviews and external blind peer review and is now ready for printing.
- Northwest Forest Plan The First Ten Years (1994-2003):
Effectiveness of the Federal-Tribal Relationships (PDF, 1.09 MB)
Powerpoints
| Presenter | Powerpoint Presentation | Format |
|---|---|---|
| Claudia Stuart - US Forest Service, PNW Research Station | Effectiveness of the Federal-tribal Relationship: Implications for Adaptive Management | PDF, 1 MB |
| Merv George, Executive Director - California Indian Fire and Forest Management Council | Tribal Perspective onthe NW Forest Plan | PDF, 108 kb |
