Frank Bonner Chose Career Early VOLUME 20 • No. 2 • APRIL 2015 Frank and Angie Bonner a team . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . Page 4 Training classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 11 Paper for this publication produced in the U.S.A. The Louisiana Logging Council P.O. Box 5067 • Alexandria, LA 71307-5067 Presorted Standard U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 270 Alexandria, LA 71307 Large or small, Caterpillar® machines feature fuel-saving hydraulic systems that provide high swing torque, fast swing speeds and incredible lift capacity to reduce cycle times and lower cost per ton. At the same time, Cat engines, with ACERT™ Technology, provide power and fuel efficiency that’s unmatched in the industry, ensuring high performance in all forestry applications. Louisiana Cat is behind you all the way with reliable and unrivaled dealer support, factory trained technicians and fully equipped facilities. And don’t forget about the wide range of options that deliver performance in even the toughest logging jobs, whether it’s picking and sorting, bunching and loading, or pull-through delimbing. It’s game’s over for the competition! Call our toll free number below to learn more about our Caterpillar products and services. 866-843-7440 [email protected] www.LouisianaCat.com ALEXANDRIA 3575 N Bolton Ave. HAMMOND 42440 Jackson Rd. LAKE CHARLES 5415 E. Broad St. PRAIRIEVILLE 16613 Airline Hwy. BOSSIER CITY 5606 Industrial Dr. LAFAYETTE 100 Boyce Dr. MONROE 2201 Ticheli Rd. RESERVE 3799 West Airline Hwy. © 2013 Caterpillar All rights reserved. CAT, CATERPILLAR, their respective logos, “Caterpillar Yellow,” the “Power Edge” trade dress as well as corporate and product identity used herein, are trademarks of Caterpillar and may not be used without permission. www.cat.com www.caterpillar.com Someone may be watching you! By C.A. “Buck” Vandersteen A friend of forestry in the Louisiana State Legislature called the other day and talked about the improvements he has seen in the logging industry. He complimented loggers for the professional improvement he’s seen and complimented the Logging Council and Forestry Association for what we have done to educate lawmakers about our business. He then went on to say that he knew we were big on safety and that he didn’t have to propose regulations in the Legislature against our industry because he knew we were able to police ourselves. Then he asked what we were going to do about those log trucks that had mud covered flags on the back end of loads. They are supposed to be red and clearly visible to oncoming traffic. He said he was driving in the early mornings to Baton Rouge and wondered why overhanging logs did not have a red light on the end of the loads. He never threatened legislation but we knew what he was saying, get it right or he will! Loggers are watched by everyone. We mess up and we get hammered. We do the right thing and we get no thanks or appreciation because people expect us to be professionals. We have to be at the top of our game each and every day. I had a logger friend who recently passed away and he had an experience worth sharing. He was a Master Logger and in his spare time fooled around with cattle. He wanted to expand his pasture so he cut his timber and pushed the debris into a creek bed running through his property. EPA officials were monitoring water quality downstream and saw dirt and debris in the water. Their curiosity lead “We knew what he was saying, get it right or he will.” them upstream until they came to the farm that our Master Logger cleared for his cattle. An EPA call to Louisiana’s Department of Environmental Quality and then a call to our association brought DEQ, logger, and our association together to the site. The Master Logger knew and supported Best Management Practices (BMPs) and knew about stream-side management zones (SMZs). When Louisiana Logger President Buzz Jenkins Robeline 318-472-6407 [email protected] Gracee Malone-Texada, Staff Assistant 318 443-2558 [email protected] Published quarterly by the Louisiana Logging Council P.O. Box 5067 Alexandria, LA 71307 318 - 443-2558 Chapter Chairmen Chapter 6 - Malcolm Chapter 1 - Lawrence Hill Sibley Spearsville • 318-778-9900 Walker • [email protected] 7935 Caskey Terrell [email protected] Farmerville • 318-368-8822 Chapter 7 - Ralph Roe Jr. [email protected] Robeline• 318-481-4781 Chapter 2 - John Keith and Skeet [email protected] Hodgkins For information about Haughton • 318-949-3672 articles or advertising, [email protected] please call Janet Chapter 3 - Jack McFarland Tompkins at 318Winnfield • 318-727-9696 443-2558. [email protected] Joshue McAllister For information on Winnfield • 318- 729-1727 classes or training [email protected] records, consult the Chapter 4 - Tommy Frazier website: Boyce • 318-793-8659 www.laforestry.com [email protected] or call Gracee MaloneChapter 5 - Angie Bonner/Lisa Texada at 318-443McCain • Evans •337-286-9837 2558. [email protected] asked if he knew about them, why did he ignore them on his property? He replied he thought BMPs and SMZs were only for loggers. BMPs and SMZs are for every- Vandersteen one and the story ended well in that he agreed to clear the debris from the creek and reseed the banks. The best part is that DEQ did not fine him because he was a Master Logger and belonged to the Louisiana Forestry Association and Logging Council. Even back in the woods where we think no one is watching, someone has an interest in what we are doing. We have to be at the top of our game every day. The 2015 Legislative Session begins April 13. It will be a tough budget year with over a $1.6 billion deficit. Our Office of Forestry will take a hit and will focus almost entirely on fire protection and enforcement of forest laws. Be vigilant and if someone is doing something that gives loggers a bad name report it. The legislature is looking at all tax exemptions. Our exemption from state sales tax on logging equipment and parts will be reviewed. Stay tuned to our Legislative Report and take action when needed. You can request an email of the report for your computer or phone by emailing [email protected]. This is a member service so if you are not a member of the Logging Council you will have to make that small investment and become one. Loggers, industry, financial institutions, and economic development foundations recently met at the LFA office to discuss impediments to improving logging capacity. Financing, trucking, labor, and succession planning were identified as areas for further discussion and recommendations. If you have any recommendations to share please drop us a line. (Buck Vandersteen is the executive director of the Louisiana Forestry Association and Louisiana Logging Council.) Second Quarter 2015 3 Bonner Logging Frank & Angie Bonner By Elona Weston Frank and Angie Bonner of Evans work together as a team along with their crew of three. Frank started logging when he was 18 and eventually started his own job. (Photo by Elona Weston) Bonner Logging has husband and wife duo When Frank Bonner was 12 years At 18, he began driving skidders, Bonners’ trucking. old and planting trees by hand on his loaders and trucks. “He does a great job for us,” said home place in Evans, he knew what he Thirty-four years later, at 52, Frank Bennett. “A point a lot of people miss wanted to be. owns his own logging business and is in this work, you have to do a great “My Daddy got me interested in it works alongside his wife Angie, who he job for a very long time and Frank has and he asked me what I wanted to be married 26 years ago. done that," he said. when I grew up and I said, ‘a logger’,” The two are a team. When Frank Frank logs primarily in Beauregard Frank recalled. can’t do something, Angie steps in. and Vernon parishes. He uses a Frank’s father, Johnny, who TigerCat 234 loader, TigerCat was killed in a car accident 25 630C skidder and TigerCat 718 years ago, worked for the “As long as there’s a tree, somebody E shear. Louisiana Department of is also extra equipment is going to cut it because there is if There Agriculture and raised cattle on something breaks down, his 150-acre farm. including a TigerCat 230B money in trees.” “The stock law passed and we loader, TigerCat 620C skidder didn’t have money to build and TigerCat 720D shear. fences on the 150 acres to keep the “She’s a master logger and she’s a goA Chambers delimbinator and a farm going. We sold cows and we getter,” Frank said. “She’s my partner. 460J John Deere bull dozer complete planted trees by hand,” Frank Without her, I couldn’t do it.” the Bonner inventory. explained. “He taught me everything I know,” Frank said his employees, John Frank watched the trees grow and Angie said. “I started coming out here Brittain, Charles Brittain and Paul helped his father care for them. At with him and I haven’t left.” Medley, are invaluable. Evans High School, he became Angie is a co-chair on the Chapter 5 John Brittain and Charles Brittain involved in Future Farmers of America, Louisiana Logging Council, along with have been with him for 12 years, and under then-instructors W.F. Dowden Lisa McCain, the office manager for Medley has been a crew member for and William Carver. Bennett Timber Company. over a year. For 12 years, Frank has worked for “I can leave and go somewhere, and Bennett Timber, owned by Robert they work the same as they would if I COVER PHOTO: Frank Bonner worked alongside his father at an early age planting Bennett, a wood dealer out of was standing right here,” Frank said. trees. Today he makes his living cutting them DeRidder. The Bonners have seen ups and down. Bennett Timber also handles the downs in the industry. 4 Managing operations closely, Frank said, is what has seen them through. “I pay myself a salary and I don’t mess with my other money. I leave it alone for breakdowns,” he said. Roads, wet weather and fuel costs are always challenges. Faith is also important to the Bonners. “It’s God first, family and then job,” Frank said. “I went to the altar and prayed for the good Lord to help me and the next thing I know, here I was and I had this,” he said. Frank said he wishes more young people would consider logging as a career. Though it’s hard work, it’s fulfilling, he said. “It’s a $3 billion a year industry and you can’t find a young person who wants to do it anymore. They want to go make the big bucks at the mills and the shutdowns and stuff like that. I drove my own skidder for five or six years before I even hired anyone to keep my cost down, and when you start looking for one, you can’t find Frank Bonner’s crew is shown at a logging work site in the Plainview Community near Florien. From left to right are: Paul Medley, John Brittain, Charles Brittain, Bonner and his wife, Angie. anybody that’s qualified for the job,” he said. But despite this, Frank believes there will always be a future in trees. “As long as there’s a tree, somebody is going to cut it because there is money in trees. There’s money to be made,” he said. Frank said he knows it may seem strange to some to hear that logging is his passion. “Been doing it all my life. I love it. It has its ups and downs, but this is what I love doing,” he said. Bonner is seeking a seat on the Alexandria and Baton Rouge Alexandria • 318- 448-6211 Baton Rouge • 225-923-3450 Vernon Parish Police Jury this fall. He said if elected, he hopes he can use his experience to represent his constituents well. (Elona Weston is a reporter for a radio station in Leesville.) Office of Forestry will close nurseries The latest casualty of the dwindling state budget is the state tree nursery program under the Office of Forestry. The state nursery produces about 16 million pine seedlings and 3 million hardwoods in an average year. State Forester Wade Dubea said the growing stock was all consolidated at the Columbia nursery in recent years and the two other facilities in Beauregard and Ouachita parishes were used for shipping purposes. All three locations will be offered for lease through a public announcement. “The Columbia facility is probably one of the best sites for tree seedlings,” Dubea said. “It’s a prime location.” The reduction also included the 12 full time employees of the nursery and the 18 seasonal employees. 5 Don’t D Don n’t tG Get Lef Left Out in n the th th he e Co Cold! C old! ol old! old d Louisiana Louisiana Loggers Lo Louisia Logg gers ers e er rs rs Self-Insured Sel Se S elf-In l ns nsu nsured s e Fund sur Fund F nd is heating is he h eating ng g th things s up pb by refunding our members refu ref re funding g ou ur r me m emb mbers s $1. Million $ $1.53 Miil M Mil ill liio on For o mor formati contact: c For moree information, Loo issi Lou Louisian si naa Loggers Self-Insured Selff--Insur nsured e Fund Louisiana Hwy 9127 H wy y 84 8 West West P .O. Bo x 712 P.O. Box ) )Z ZĊEDG(=9A< A > )ZĊEDG(=9A<> SS>9<T:@<OA8>9 >99<T:@<OA8>9 > Directors: Di irectors: Mich Mic Michael Mi M icha icha ic h lF Franks T on ny M ny Mc cManus Tony McManus Robert R b t Franks F Steven S St Ste t ven n Gaar Don on nT ant Tant Administrator: m Evelyn Evelyn n Garner Administrati ve Asst: Jeannie Jeannie Gaar Administrative Safety ty y Engineer: Jimmy Jimm my Standley Standley Cong Congratulations to our members m for th their safe operations. pay dividends. vidends. Operation surplus lowers lowers the Safety y does pa iden employer’s em mployer s cost of Workers’ Workers’ Compensation. 6 OSHA Alliance with loggers works to improve safety For 14 years, the Louisiana Forestry Association (LFA) and Louisiana Logging Council (LLC) have worked with OSHA’s Baton Rouge office to reduce fatalities and injuries in the logging profession. With fatalities now rare in the woods, the group has formed an alliance to work with logging businesses to provide guidance and training to further improve health and safety in the industry. “When this partnership was formed in 2000, it was the first in the nation,” said C.A. “Buck” Vandersteen, executive director of both the forest and logging groups. “There had been eight fatalities in the woods in a 16 month time. In the ensuing 14 years there has fewer fatalities than that in Louisiana’s forests.” Wilfred J. Hebert, compliance assistance specialist with the Baton Rouge OSHA office, said the group will now go to business owners in the logging community to see what they need to improve the health and safety of their workers. “The LFA and the LLC along with OSHA and our forestry partners at LSU have worked to improve the health and safety of workers in logging,” said Hebert. “We will meet with our logging partners throughout the year to enhance the safe working environments.” The award-winning safety program to date has provided annual safety training Signing the Alliance between the Louisiana Forestry Association, the Louisiana Logging Council and OSHA are C.A. “Buck” Vandersteen, executive director of both the LFA and LLC, Dorinda Folse and Buzz Jenkins, LLC president. programs and each year the business partners have provided a confidential list of injuries that have occurred on the job. Dr. Niels deHoop at LSU-Baton Rouge compiles the list to show what job-related activities are most hazardous to workers. The results of the survey are published in the Louisiana Logger, a free quarterly publication sent to the logging community. “The focus of the last few years has shifted to accidents and injuries affecting Workers at the Rapides ARC--the sheltered workshop in Alexandria--bag trees for the Louisiana Forestry Association seedling giveaway for Arbor Day in January. truck drivers,” Vandersteen said. Deaths in the logging community Former Louisiana Logging Council President Travis Taylor died Dec. 27, 2014 after a long battle with cancer. “He had an unflagging interest in logging and forestry even while fighting this illness,” said C.A. “Buck” Vandersteen, executive director of the LLC and the Louisiana Forestry Association. He was awarded the first Lifetime Achievement Award last August by the LLC and was instrumental in the development of the program at the technical school for the timber equipment operators. Other notable deaths in logging are: * Charles E. Lasiter of Kelly, was a logging contractor for 44 years. He was an Army Veteran and forest landowner. He died Feb. 23 at the medical center in Columbia. • David Edwards, 53, of Pineville, died Nov. 5 at Rapides Regional Hospital in Alexandria.. He was a selfemployed logger by trade. 7 Mooreʼs Retread & Tire 409 Keyser Ave. Natchitoches, LA 71457 (318) 352-8354 Mooreʼs Retread & Tire 8901 Linwood Ave. Shreveport, LA 71106 (318) 687-7951 8 Stop by and see us today! Mooreʼs Retread & Tire 2600 N Medford Dr. Lufkin, Tx 75901 (936) 632-6706 Moore-Grant Goodyear 629 N 3rd St Alexandria, LA 71301 Mooreʼs Retread & Tire 15275 FM 968 West Longview, TX 75602 (903) 236-8883 It’s wild turkey season in the woods of Louisiana leapt into Marshall’s lap, its front paws By Don Reed Mid-March in Louisiana is once again the time of year for striking the startled hunter squarely in turkey hunters to engage in the annual ritual (or madness) that the chest. The coyote realized the misruns for about 30 days. In recent years I’ve gotten greater enjoy- taken identity of his planned meal and ment by calling in gobblers for younger hunters who have never quickly bounced off a kicking and harvested a bird rather than tagging one myself. Regardless of screaming Marshall. All escaped the how you approach the sport, once you become involved with encounter without a scratch and, hunting our wild turkey, it’s hard to think about doing anything although no turkey was bagged that Don Reed morning, both boys had something to else in March and April. remember. The two aspects of the sport that really seem to either make or So much has been written and stated concerning all the break a successfully turkey hunt are the calling that is involved techniques for turkey calling that sometimes you can feel overalong with the location where it is done. When to call, how aggressive to call, and what call to use are whelmed when trying to decide what to do when it comes some of the most intriguing parts of turkey hunting. I’ve hunted time to coax a gobbler within range. Practice and experience are the best ways to learn, but with some really great callers that were able to do some amazing things in making a gobbler think he was headed for the real thing always remember–– it’s turkeys that you’re dealing with, and just when you think you have them figured out, they send you instead of a load of #5 heavy shot. back to the drawing board. I’m sure most all turkey hunters They say real estate is all about have heard stories of callers bringing “I’ve hunted with some great callers location; well, the same can be in bobcats, coyotes or other predawho could make a gobbler think he said for turkey hunting. When a tors, but my son Matt and his huntgobbler tips his hand early in the ing partner Marshall Varnado came was headed for the real thing instead morning while still on the roost, back with a tale that might prove to of a load of #5 heavy shot.” there is essentially a 360 degree anyone how convincing a good area from which he can hit the turkey caller can sound. When the two boys returned from their morning hunt a few ground to begin his day. Your set up and location in regard to years back, Matt had a big grin on his face and Marshall was as the terrain is often the key to success at this early junction in white as a ghost. Matt couldn’t wait to tell of the mornings events. the hunt. Gobblers will often pitch down from the roost in the Marshall, who was doing the calling, had set up near a small clearwrong direction from the hunter but the right direction for ing next to some over-hanging branches that hid him from view. Matt was about 10 yards away facing the clearing where they what the gobbler has in mind. Chances are, especially early thought the bird would come. After a few short calls, Matt in the season, that he has one or several hens nearby, and it’s watched as a fully grown coyote ran through the clearing and hard for the best caller in the woods to compete with the real thing. The nature of the mating ritual in wild turkeys dictates that the hens travel to meet up with the gobblers. By this procedure, trying to bring a gobbler into one’s location is going against the bird’s basic breeding instincts. When headed away from your location, I’ve learned the best move is not necessarily to try and turn him around but to make a flanking move and get out in front of where he is going in an attempt to duel at another location. Finally, when things aren’t going my way in the woods during our short turkey season, I like to remember what my friend and retired AgCenter forester Barry Crain told me many years ago when he first got me hooked on the sport. “Patience and persistence bring home more turkeys than anything else!” Once you become involved in trukey season, it’s hard to think about doing anything else in March and April. (Photo courtesy Don Reed) (Dr. Don Reed is a forestry and wildlife specialist with the LSU AgCenter. Email him at [email protected].) 9 ! NOTHING TAMES THE FOREST LIKE A DEERE. APRIL 2015 C Call all or dr drop op by any any of our Louisiana Louisiana loc locations ations ffor or ccomplete omplete of offer fer de details. tails. Alexandria 318 318-442-0455 318-442 442 442-0455 0455 Baton B aton R Rouge ouge 225-291-3750 225-291 291-3750 Covington 985-893-3005 C ovington 985-893 893-3005 Kenner 504-466 504-466-5577 466-5577 LLafayette afayette 337-837 337-837-9481 837-9481 LLake ake C Charles harles 337-626 337-626-8502 626-8502 Monroe 318-343 318-343-8787 343-8787 S hreveport 318-631 Shreveport 318-631-3090 631-3090 10 April, these ese game-changing game-changing L-Series Series machines will will take take logging logging to a new new level level ooff In A pril, th Thanks to iinput nput frfrom om gguys uys llike ike yyou, ou, th they’ll ey’ll bbee th thee to toughest, ughest, m most ost pproductive roductive pproductivity. roductivity. Thanks equipment we’ve Because Deere, We’re Forr LLoggers. equipment w e’ve ever ever made. made. B ecause aatt JJohn ohn D eere, W e’re Fo oggers. www.doggettgroup.com www.doggettgroup.com CONTINUING EDUCATION A new Continuing Ed class will be available in July and again in the fall. Check back at our website www.laforestry.com for sign-up information or call Gracee Malone-Texada at (318) 443-2558. Other opportunities: April 2: Chapter 7 meeting, at Trailco of I-49, 16 Chad St., Mansfield , 6 p.m. Topic will be a Haldex Brake Class. 2 CLEs. RSVP required to Gary Philibert at 318-455-1973. April 20-24: Rapides Forest Awareness, Indian Creek. Call Janet Tompkins at (318) 443-2558 to volunteer for a day. 6 hrs. CLE. May 1: Forestry BMPs, Winn Parish Library, Winnfield, 8 a.m. -2:30 p.m. includes field tour and lunch. 6 CLE. Contack Olivia Ward at 318-255-2554 or email [email protected]. June 18-20: In-Woods Expo, Hot Springs. sponsored by the Arkansas Timber Producers and Hatton-Brown Publishing. See details at www.arkloggers.com or call (501) 224-2232. 6 hrs. CLE. Aug. 25-27: Louisiana Forestry Association Annual Convention, Golden Nugget in Lake Charles, 6 hrs. CLE. Registration available in June. Pipeline Safety Classes will be offered in August and September around the state. Each class is worth 2 hrs CLE. See our website under the Training Page for a link. Register at the new LFA website The Louisiana Forestry Association website was redesigned in February and requires new registration for those viewing the training records. Just click the “Register” button in the top left corner and fill it out with your user name and a password in order to access the training records. The website has information about the harvest season permit, the sales tax exemption on equipment, links to chapter chairman for the LLC and other forestry facts pertinent to Louisiana. www.laforestry.com MASTER LOGGER CLASS Classes will be held at the Country Inn & Suites, 2727 Monroe Hwy, Pineville, LA 71360 For overnight guests, you can call (318) 641-8332, ask for Sarah Atwood and tell them you are with the LFA group. There will be Master Logger classes Sept. 30, Oct. 1, and Oct. 7-8 in Pineville as well as the May class below. Another round will be held at the Sabine Valley Technical School in Many on Sept. 8-11 in conjunction with the THEO program. Pre-registration and payment required! Pre-register or pay double at the door. *Reduced to $20 for La. Logging Council members if pre-registered. ___ Best Management Practices Wednesday, May 6 8 a.m. ___ Safety (TH/TS & OSHA Regulations) Thursday, May 7 8 a.m. ___ Forestry Aesthetics/Erosion Control Wednesday, May 13 8 a.m. ___ Business Management Thursday, May 14 8 a.m. $40* $40* $40 $40* You must register for all the classes to get your Master Logger certificate. For 6 hrs CLE, only the Business Management class is available. Name: ____________________________________ Company: _________________________________ Address: _________________________________ City, State Zip: _____________________________ Phone: ____________________________________ Cell phone: _________________________________ ❑ Check here if La. Logging Council member company Make check payable to LA Forestry Association and mail to: LA Forestry Association PO Box 5067 Alexandria, LA 71307 Or charge to credit card: AmEx ❑ MasterCard ❑ Visa ❑ Discover ❑ Card Number ______________________________________ Expiration ______________________ Name on Card _______________________ Signature ______________________________ If paying by credit card, fax registration to 318-443-1713. Make a copy of this schedule for your records! If paying by credit card, fax registration to 318-443-1713 or scan and email to [email protected]. 11 Kisatchie Quarter to be issued April 22 in Alexandria Among the 56 new quarters being issued by the U.S. Mint in its “America the Beautiful” series is the Kisatchie National Forest coin. The official ceremony for the quarter will be April 22 at 10 a.m. at the Alexandria Riverfront Center. The public is invited to attend. The 2015 Kisatchie quarter has the wild turkey in flight over blue stem grass with long leaf pine in the background. Kisatchie National Forest is spread across seven parishes in Louisiana and is divided into five managed ranger districts. It was first established as a national site on June 3, 1936. U.S. Mint officials will deliver the uncirculated quarters and Red River Bank will serve as the teller exchange for those wishing to purchase quarters in commemorative packs. Minimum purchase is $10 and maximum purchase is $100. Children under the age of 18 will receive a free quarter in a U.S. plastic case. Coin collectors flock to these U.S. Mint events to secure uncirculated quarters. Tom Tidwell, chief of the U.S. Forest Service, and Kisatchie Forest Supervisor Ed Taylor will preside over the Kisatchie Quarter unveiling along with U.S. Mint officials. The ceremony will include live music and singing from local school groups. The Kisatchie is Louisiana’s only national forest. We’ve got your number — LOGGING — — C R O S S I N G A P I P E L I N E R I G H T O F WAY — — IMPROVING DRAINAGE — — LEVELING LAND — Please call 811 first. That’s all it takes to notify LA One Call members so that they can mark their nearby cables and pipelines. If you’re moving dirt, it’s the law. And it’s free. 12 W W W. L A O N E C A L L . C O M Join the Louisiana Logging Council today! The Louisiana Logging Council works for you – lobbying our legislature and working with regulatory agencies. Do you have time to make your voice count? All you have to do is join the council today. Membership in the LLC also automatically makes you a member in the Louisiana Forestry Association. The LLC is an affiliate of the American Loggers’ Council, the national voice for logging. Annual membership ❑ Logging Contractors $250 ❑ Wood Dealers $250 ❑ Trucking contractors $250 Associate membership ❑ Equipment Dealers $300 ❑ Insurance & Banks $300 ❑ Service and Supplies $150 Name ______________________________________ Address ____________________________________ City ________________________State ___________ Zip _____________ Phone _____________________ E-mail ______________________________________ Make checks payable to the Louisiana Logging Council. Mail to LLC, PO Boc 5067, Alexandria LA 71307 As I See It: Are our national forests better off today? By Myles Anderson Have you ever thought what it would be like to wake up one morning to the reality of having lost your job, lost all the infrastructure that once supported your job and wonder how your community and your family would survive? Fast forward to the reality of today, the living wage jobs are long gone and your community is dependent on government aid rather than the vibrant economy that once flourished there. Rural families throughout the United States living adjacent to nationally owned forests, where once a thriving industry harvested and manufactured renewable resources have been forced into living this reality for the last 15 years. The forest that was once managed to minimize fuel loading, create jobs and provide revenue for the local communities is now an overstocked and tinder dry fuel source or worse, a sea of blackened snags. This government aid that communities have come to rely is known as the Secure Rural School Act (SRS). The SRS Act monetarily supports communities and is meant to substitute for all the jobs that were lost as a result of our government’s decision to stop managing the lands surrounding these communities. Historically these rural communities received a portion of the receipts from Forest Service timber sales and more importantly the jobs and lifestyle that went along with living in a vibrant community. The SRS is critical for many rural communities. This act funds over 775 rural counties and 4,400 schools. The Secure Rural Schools Act was first passed in 2000 and since then every year these counties have come to rely on this funding for their very existence. The sad truth is there is no certainty from year to year associated with the funding. Each year families in these communities wait on Congress to decide whether or not their basic needs will be funded through a bill or resolution. Usually these funds are held hostage by one party or another because of unrelated issues. A commonsense approach to this issue would be to put this effort into restoring the economic viability of these communities through increased forest management. Anderson Perhaps this is too simplistic an approach to solving this problem; however, I believe that a majority of people in this country are beginning to realize our federally owned forests are in a state of declining health. Most are very supportive of green fire breaks, removing the dead and dying trees and managing the fuel load. Our federal forests could and should be managed in a sustainable way creating jobs and strong communities rather than waiting for the inevitable fire. The best measure of the cost of these (318) 445-4561 (318) 872-1477 (318) 742-9888 (318) 356-8811 (318) 925-8811 (318) 687-1112 (Continued on page 14) 13 As I See It (Continued from page 13) catastrophic fires is in air quality impacts, the destruction of critical habitat, the deterioration of water quality and the numerous animal welfare (habitat) issues. According to the USDA in regards to the Forest Service, “Our mission, as set forth by law, is to achieve quality land management under the sustainable multiple-use management concept to meet the diverse needs of people”. I propose this question: Do you feel the national forests and in turn our rural communities are in a better position environmentally and socially now then we were 20 years ago when the Forest Service was actually managing our forests? There is a difference between conservation and preservation, and the fact that managed timberland has many benefits both environmentally and socially should not be overlooked when describing the difference. Many ideas are floating around Washington D.C. on how best to facilitate a new direction within the U.S. Forest Service. Perhaps it will require leg- 14 islation that charts a new course, or a change in leadership to get the agency back on track or even a return to common sense that places management back into the hands of the professionals who are trained to manage the forests, not the liberal courtrooms with their own agendas who opt to side with radical environmental organizations who continue to thrive off of the settlements and awards offered through the Equal Access to Justice Act. What is important is that Washington hears from constituents on how important it is to utilize our natural resources for both the environmental benefits and the social benefits. I for one would like to go to work each day and support my family in an industry that relies on a renewable resource, rather than reliving the nightmare of Congressional consent every year. When deciding as to what should benefit from federal forests I would ask that human beings be a prime consideration as we deliberate. (Myles Anderson is the current president of the American Loggers Council and he and his father Mike own and operate Anderson Logging, Inc. based out of Fort Bragg, Calif.) (The American Loggers Council is a nonprofit 501(c) (6) corporation representing professional timber harvesters in 30 states.) Annual meeting in L.C. Aug. 25-27 The Louisiana Forestry Association annual meeting will be Aug. 25-27 at the the Golden Nugget resort in Lake Charles. Part of the agenda is a logger seminar on Wednesday, Aug. 26 and the special presentation of the Logger of the Year that evening. Those who register for the meeting will also earn 6 hours Continuing Logger Education credit. The Golden Nugget just opened in January and the convention room rate will be $119 per night. There is free parking at the resort. The facility has 740 luxury rooms and suites all with private balconies. There is a marina, pools and a number of restaurants under the Landry’s brand. Keep your safety program up-to-date By Niels de Hoop First, let’s remember that a couple of changes in OSHA regulations went into effect back at the beginning of this year: All work-related inpatient hospitalizations must be reported to OSHA within 24 hours (the old standard was an accident in which 3 or more people were injured). All amputations and loss of eye must be reported, too. Fatalities must still be reported within 8 hours. The number is 1-800-321-OSHA (6742). The Hazard Communication (HazCom) Standard is now aligned with the Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labeling of Chemicals (GHS). For the moment, this means that, as a leader in your company, you need to get your hands on OSHA’s 2-page Fact Sheet 3642 (which can be downloaded from https://www.osha.gov/Publications/OSHA3642.pdf ), hold a safety meeting, tell the employees that changes are coming in the Hazard Communication Standard (specifically, new label elements and a new MSDS format (henceforth to be called simply Safety Data Sheets (SDS), using the above Fact Sheet as your guide, and have everyone sign a sheet of paper to document the meeting. See my article in the last issue of The Louisiana Logger for details, or search the OSHA website (www.osha.gov). Many companies are getting fined for not holding the simple meeting on HazCom changes. Don’t be one of them, unless you really enjoy supporting the government financially! Speaking of OSHA regulations, OSHA standards require that loggers hold safety meetings at least monthly. This means that in each logging crew or company, someone must ask, “What will be the topic of this month’s safety meeting?” While the list of possible topics is long, sooner or later we seriously ask ourselves this question, especially if we feel like doing something different for a change. The folks at the Southwest Center for Agricultural Health, Injury Prevention and Education (SWAG, University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler) are making a strong effort to help with this very issue. They are developing materials that can be used for tailgate safety meeting topics. Right now, they are taking 21 real accidents from around the South and developing one-page stories with discussion-generating questions that can make anyone an expert discussion leader in safety meetings. They are also seeking ideas on how to develop videos. These videos may go along with these stories or they may be something different. The “idea book” is still open. If you have any thoughts on how to improve safety training to the logging crews, contact me (see below) and I can pass it along – I serve on the advisory board of SWAG. The folks at SWAG are also considering ways safety training or issues can be promoted using smart phones or tablets. Here again, we welcome your thoughts and ideas. Mechanization has really helped reduce the number of accidents in logging, but the fact remains that when we have a logging accident, it tends to be a bad one. Thus, the need for safety training, safety improvements and sharing ideas remains as strong as ever. With logging operations being conducted by small, scattered crews, we need to be ever-innovative in how to improve safety. (C.F. “Niels” de Hoop is an associate professor at the Louisiana Forest Products Development Center, School of Renewable Natural Resources, Niels deHoop Louisiana Cooperative Extension Service, LSU AgCenter. Contact: [email protected]; 225-578-4242. This work is supported by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, McIntire Stennis project 227333.) LSU Forestry students discuss a map of the worksite with Dennis Aucoin, of Slaughter Logging LLC, before doing anything else on the worksite. A safety orientation like this is important for all workers, subcontractors, salesmen and visitors on any worksite. Likewise, logging crews should discuss the work plan every day. Also, OSHA regulations require safety meetings to be held at least monthly. Who will be our 2015 Outstanding Logger? Nominate someone today! I want to nominate: Name: ______________________________ Mailing address: ______________________ ____________________________________ Mobile phone: ________________________ Nominated by: ________________________ Mobile phone: ________________________ Deadline May 1, 2015. Mail to La. Logging Council, PO Box 5067, Alexandria, LA 71307 or email to [email protected]. Award will be presented Aug. 26 at the Golden Nugget in Lake Charles. 15 2015 THEO class to be held at technical school in Many Louisiana’s Timber Harvesting Equipment Operator (THEO) training, which has been held in Winnfield the past two years, will hold a class in Many, beginning May 26. Members of the THEO Advisory Committee have met with Dean Laurie Morrow of the Sabine Valley campus of the Northwest Louisiana Technical College, and firmed up the plans to offer the training in Sabine Parish. “This should give companies in the western portion of the state a chance to hire trained personnel sometime in September when the students will receive a Technical Certificate,” said Holly Morgan, forester who has been working with the group. Helping support the THEO training this year is the Natchitoches Community Alliance Foundation, Inc. (NCA). The NCA is a qualified 501(c) organization focused on economic development and workforce solutions in the region and throughout Louisiana. 16 “The NCA is charged with working with the THEO Council and the forestry community to help coordinate and market this course,” said Mike Wolff, vice president for economic development with the NCA. He added “ We are pleased to support the landowner, the logger and the forest products manufacturers through these efforts”. The THEO program was developed in 2013 in response to the decline in the number of experienced operators of timber harvesting equipment. The average age of the logging employee is around 45 years old, and there are very few young people with the experience to get into the business. The THEO Advisory Committee hopes that offering training will encourage more young people to consider a career in logging. Students are CPR/First Aid and OSHA 10-Hour certified when they receive their certificates. They also take the Master Logger core courses and receive a Master Logger certification. Much of the training is hands-on, operating the three common pieces of logging equipment: skidder, loader, and feller-buncher. Each student that graduates will receive 15 hours of community college credit, the Timber Harvesting Equipment operator certification, the 10-hour OSHA certification and the Master Logger certification. Instructors are retired logging contractors, who teach the students to operate the equipment, and show them how to work as a team. The curriculum was recently accepted by the Technical College Board of Directors as a credit program, so students will now be eligible for financial assistance through the LCTCS system. In addition, there are a number of sponsorships offered to interested students by the local industry. For more information about this training program call (318)609-1230 or e-mail to louisianaloggingschool Look out for possible swarming emerald ash borers in April In late January the first confirmed finding of the emerald ash borer (EAB) in the state occurred when Wood Johnson, U.S. Forest Service entomologist, identified the pest beneath the bark of ash trees growing about 175 yards south of the Arkansas border in Webster Parish. Samples were sent through Forest Service channels and were confirmed to be the pest. Those working in the woods should be aware of any signs of the beetle who swarm during April. Anyone who detects a possible infestation should call in the location to the Louisiana Office of Forestry at (225) 925-4500, according to state forester Wade Dubea. It is expected that Webster Parish will be put under a quarantine order soon which would prohibit moving any ash out of the parish. Ash makes up only 5% of the forests of Louisiana but in the most suitable habitat in the Delta it can be a larger percentage. It is also a valuable wood prized by several manufacturers from baseball bats to guitar makers. Louisiana is the 25th state to have the beetle pest. The larvae (the immature stage) feed on the inner bark of ash trees, disrupting the tree's ability to transport water and nutrients. The emerald ash borer has killed millions of trees from Michigan to Virginia. Arkansas had quarantined the movement of ash and firewood out of their infected counties hoping to stop the spread. Researchers believe that most of the spread comes from the movement of firewood. The emerald ash borer puts at risk the $557.5 million ash sawtimber growing in our Louisiana forests. If ash disappears from our forests, landowners will lose the annual harvest values at about $12.6 million, according to figures from the LSU AgCenter and the U.S. Forest Service. Mortality of the tree from the EAB is high--as much as 99 percent. A new Forest SEevice paper on the beetle said the EAB “is poised to wipe out native ash in North America with expected catastrophic losses to ash tree forestry.” The beetle has hit urban areas as well wiping out tree canopies in many cities. There is an insecticide for use on valuable trees in an urban setting but it has to be repeated over time. The destructive emerald ash borer has been found in Webster Parish. Loggers are asked to be on the lookout for the swarming insects this month. Subscribe to the Louisiana Logger Only Active Master Loggers have free subscriptions, but you can order one for your crew members for $12 per year. (4 issues per year) Name: ___________________________________ Mailing address: ___________________________ City, State, Zip: ___________________________ Phone: ___________________________________ Mobile phone: _____________________________ Make checks payable to: Louisiana Logging Council Mail to : PO Box 5067 Alexandria LA 71307 Absolute Pressure A Division of Aaron Equipment & Chemical, Inc. ✔ Custom Mobile Pressure Washers ✔ Trailers Built to Suit ✔ Lease Financing Available ✔ 24/7 Mobile Service ✔ Price Match Guarantee ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Chemical & Pressure Washer Sales & Service 318-631-2400 5008 Greenwood Road • Shreveport LA 71109 [email protected] 17 Crimes and convictions An Allen Parish couple is charged with six counts each of forestry equipment theft and one count each of simple criminal damage to property. Investigators say Joey Ganson, 34, was already in jail on unrelated charges. He was booked Jan. 15. Jamie CokerBrown, 34, was arrested and booked on Feb. 12, 2015. Last September, the Allen Parish Sheriff’s Office (APSO) started receiving complaints that hundreds of gallons of diesel fuel, radios and other equipment were missing from a logging operation in the Westbay Wildlife Management area. APSO detectives contacted investigators with the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry (LDAF) and a three month joint investigation began. Investigators say Coker-Brown admitted that she and Ganson committed the thefts which occurred during the months of September and October. Investigators and the APSO were able to locate and recover much of the stolen equipment. Ganson and Coker-Brown also face multiple charges from the APSO in connection to thefts from area businesses. Both have been placed on probation hold by the State Department of Corrections. If convicted of theft of more than $25,000, the suspects face a minimum of five years hard labor and a fine not to exceed $50,000 or both. If convicted of criminal property damage, the suspects face imprisonment with or without hard labor for at least two years and a fine not to exceed $1,000 or both. A Dry Prong man is accused of burning a debris pile and intentionally allowing the fire to spread to adjacent lands where a residence was burned. The incident happened Feb. 14, on Gator Hole Rd. Investigators with LDAF arrested 50-year-old Ronald Bonicard on Feb. 27 and charged him with simple arson. “A pilot in our forestry division was patrolling the area and witnessed someone setting the fire. Our pilots patrol the state daily looking for suspicious activity. Using the information provided by the pilot, the State Fire Marshal’s Office assisted us in identifying Bonicard,” said LDAF Commissioner Mike Strain. Bonicard was booked into the Grant Parish Jail and was released on $7,500 bond. Investigators say while Bonicard was in custody, he admitted starting the fire and watching without taking any action as the fire spread and consumed a nearby residence. No word yet on the estimated cost of the damage to the home. According to Louisiana law whoever commits the crime of simple arson, where the damage done amounts to $500 dollars or more, shall be fined not more than $15,000 and imprisoned at hard labor for not less than two years nor more than 15 years. www.laforestry.com 18 Casualty at the Red River papermill A Campti man died March 2 after his safety harness became entangled in machinery at the International Paper-Red River Mill, and he fell, according to a release. David Scott Long, 42, was pronounced dead at the mill, which is near Campti, according to the Natchitoches Parish Sheriff’s Office. The incident remains under investigation by IP. 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