State Allowed Logging on Plateau Above Slope of Washington Mudslide

- by Mike Bak­er, Ken Arm­strong, and Hal Bern­ton, March 25, 2014. Source: The Seat­tle Times

The plateau above the sog­gy hill­side that gave way Sat­ur­day has been logged for almost a cen­tu­ry, with hun­dreds of acres of soft­woods cut and hauled away, accord­ing to state records.

But in recent decades, as the slope has become more unsta­ble, sci­en­tists have increas­ing­ly chal­lenged the tim­ber har­vests, with some even warn­ing of pos­si­ble calamity.

The state has con­tin­ued to allow log­ging on the plateau, although it has imposed restric­tions at least twice since the 1980s. The rem­nant of one clear-cut oper­a­tion is vis­i­ble in aer­i­al pho­tographs of Saturday’s mon­strous mud­slide. A tri­an­gle — 7½ acres, the shape of a pie slice — can be seen atop the destruc­tion, its tip just cut­ting into where the hill collapsed.

Mul­ti­ple fac­tors can con­tribute to a slide.

With the hill that caved in over the week­end, geol­o­gists have point­ed to the Stil­laguamish River’s ero­sion of the hill’s base, or toe.

But log­ging can also play a role in insti­gat­ing or inten­si­fy­ing a slide, by increas­ing the amount of water seep­ing into an unsta­ble zone, accord­ing to an analy­sis of the water­shed sub­mit­ted to the state Depart­ment of Nat­ur­al Resources (DNR).

In May 1988, when a pri­vate landown­er, Sum­mit Tim­ber, received approval to begin log­ging above the slope, sci­en­tists raised alarms about the removal of trees that inter­cept or absorb so much water, accord­ing to doc­u­ments obtained by The Seat­tle Times.

Paul Ken­nard, a geol­o­gist for the Tulalip Tribes, warned reg­u­la­tors that har­vest­ing holds “the poten­tial for a mas­sive and cat­a­stroph­ic fail­ure of the entire hillslope.”

Oth­ers echoed his con­cerns. Noel Wolff, a hydrol­o­gist who worked for the state, wrote that “Tim­ber har­vest­ing could pos­si­bly cause what is like­ly an inevitable event to occur soon­er.” And Pat Steven­son, an envi­ron­men­tal biol­o­gist for the Stil­laguamish Tribe, cit­ed “the poten­tial for mas­sive fail­ure,” sim­i­lar to a slide that occurred in 1967.

The agency that issued the per­mit — the DNR — respond­ed to the con­cerns by assem­bling a team of geol­o­gists and hydrol­o­gists to study the harvest’s poten­tial impact on landslides.

Lee Ben­da, a geol­o­gist with the Uni­ver­si­ty of Wash­ing­ton, wrote a report that said har­vest­ing can increase soil water “on the order of 20 to 35 per­cent” — with that impact last­ing 16 to 27 years, until new trees matured. Ben­da looked at past slides on the hill and found they occurred with­in five to 10 years of harvests.

In August 1988, the DNR issued a stop-work order, putting Sum­mit Timber’s log­ging oper­a­tion on tem­po­rary hold.

“1988 was maybe the first time that we were get­ting seri­ous as to what you should or should not do in terms of log­ging and road con­struc­tion around those things,” said Matt Brunen­go, at that time a DNR geologist.

A week after the stop-work order, a Sum­mit rep­re­sen­ta­tive wrote DNR, say­ing $750,000 to $1 mil­lion worth of tim­ber was at stake. He list­ed alter­na­tive steps that could be tak­en to lessen the risks of a slide — for exam­ple, hav­ing the state relo­cate the chan­nel of the Stil­laguamish Riv­er that was cut­ting into the hill’s base.

“I can only con­clude that the real issue here is not slides and water qual­i­ty, but tim­ber cut­ting,” he wrote.

Although records indi­cate that at least 300 acres were har­vest­ed on the plateau in the late 1980s, the state moved to pre­vent Sum­mit Tim­ber from clear-cut­ting 48 acres con­sid­ered most like­ly to dis­charge water down the slope.

Map­ping out the areas most like­ly to feed water into unsta­ble ter­rain is “fraught with uncer­tain­ty,” wrote one geol­o­gist who stud­ied this land­slide zone in the 1990s.

Sum­mit Tim­ber was a fam­i­ly-log­ging busi­ness led by Gary Jones, who grew up in near­by Dar­ring­ton. Jones believed the acreage atop the hill was sec­ond-growth for­est, ini­tial­ly logged in the 1920s or 1930s. He said the com­pa­ny even­tu­al­ly backed away from its request to log the 48 acres, giv­en the hill’s history.

“It was a lit­tle bit risky,” Jones told The Seat­tle Times. “We decid­ed not to do it.”

Jones said he was always cau­tious when work­ing around the riv­er, espe­cial­ly con­sid­er­ing he was an avid fly fish­er­man fond of the Stillaguamish.

Ken­nard, who now works as a geo­mor­phol­o­gist at the Nation­al Park Ser­vice, said the 1988 appli­ca­tion was con­tentious because the state rarely object­ed to pro­posed har­vests. Get­ting the DNR to lim­it the cut’s scope was no small task, he said.

“That was con­sid­ered kind of a big vic­to­ry,” Ken­nard said.

Con­cerns about land­slides sur­faced again in 2004, when prop­er­ty own­er Grandy Lake applied for a per­mit to clear a 15-acre tract near the plateau’s edge.

The state reject­ed the appli­ca­tion, say­ing some of the pro­posed log­ging fell with­in a sen­si­tive area that could feed water into the slope. Work­ing in that zone would require years of inten­sive mon­i­tor­ing of pre­cip­i­ta­tion and groundwater.

Grandy Lake revised its appli­ca­tion, halv­ing its pro­posed har­vest to avoid the sen­si­tive zone. The final plan — a clear-cut shaped like a right tri­an­gle — had an east­ern bor­der that abutted the area.

The state approved Grandy Lake’s appli­ca­tion while attach­ing con­di­tions, includ­ing: “All yard­ing and log-haul­ing activ­i­ties will cease at the onset of heavy or steady rain and will not resume until the rain has sub­sided for at least 24 hours.”

Har­vest­ing in that area was fin­ished by August 2005.

Offi­cials with Grandy Lake did not return calls seek­ing com­ment Tuesday.

In Jan­u­ary 2006, a large slide hit, with so much mud crash­ing into the Stil­laguamish that the riv­er was divert­ed. Where the hill fell away was maybe 600 feet south­west of the clear-cut area.

Saturday’s slide took more of the hill, reach­ing right up to that triangle.

Grandy Lake has done selec­tive log­ging on the plateau in more recent years. Fol­low­ing the approval of a 2009 per­mit that also includ­ed an area abut­ting the sen­si­tive zone, the com­pa­ny report­ed to the state that it removed 20 per­cent of the area’s trees. It returned in 2011 and got approval to take 15 per­cent more.

Staff reporter Justin Mayo con­tributed to this report. Mike Bak­er: mbaker@seattletimes.com or 206–464-2729; Ken Arm­strong: karmstrong@seattletimes.com or 206–464-3730


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