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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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254 sLAde goRton: A hALf centuRy in poLitics<br />

the staff at the Quinault District <strong>of</strong> the Olympic National Forest got its<br />

first look at the new habitat protection circles m<strong>and</strong>ated for the Northern<br />

Spotted Owl, they crunched the numbers <strong>and</strong> braced for a shock wave. 2<br />

“<strong>The</strong>y told us the cut would be only 42 million board feet,” Carlson<br />

recalls. It got very quiet for what seemed like minutes. <strong>The</strong> room was<br />

thunderstruck. Tom Mayr, who was running the family sawmill in Hoquiam,<br />

had heard about the spotted owl a couple <strong>of</strong> years earlier at an industry<br />

meeting, <strong>and</strong> “it was kinda like, ‘yeah, yeah, yeah.’” Now he realized<br />

that the future would be “survival <strong>of</strong> the fittest.” <strong>The</strong>n Rex Holloway,<br />

a Forest Service <strong>of</strong>ficial, told them 42 million was the good news. <strong>The</strong> bad<br />

news was how low it could go. Within the next few years they’d probably<br />

be lucky to get 20 million board feet. 3<br />

Monte Dahlstrom departed with his mind reeling, anger <strong>and</strong> frustration<br />

mounting with every mile as he headed back to town. “This will be<br />

economic devastation for Grays Harbor,” he told editors at <strong>The</strong> Daily<br />

World. “It will be a different place to live.” For a while, they thought he<br />

was exaggerating. 4<br />

Gorton was caught <strong>of</strong>f guard, too. He was campaigning to reclaim his<br />

seat when federal Judge Thomas Zilly ruled that the government’s decision<br />

to not list the owl for protection under the Endangered Species Act,<br />

as environmentalists were dem<strong>and</strong>ing, was “arbitrary <strong>and</strong> capricious.” 5<br />

Two weeks after the Forest Service broke the news to the mill owners,<br />

a delegation from the Grays Harbor Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce arrived in<br />

D.C. to deliver petitions signed by 5,000 locals who believed the Forest<br />

Service plan would decimate timber country. Gorton, McGavick <strong>and</strong> Heidi<br />

Biggs, the senator’s legislative assistant for natural resources, listened intently<br />

for more than hour, which impressed LeRoy Tipton, the Chamber<br />

president. “Slade wasn’t even in his permanent <strong>of</strong>fice yet. <strong>The</strong>y went<br />

around <strong>and</strong> scrounged chairs for us from other <strong>of</strong>fices. We told him we<br />

stood to lose thous<strong>and</strong>s <strong>of</strong> jobs when you factor in the multiplier from<br />

each job dependent on timber dollars. Slade was shocked that they were<br />

just pulling the rug out from under us. It was clear to me—to all <strong>of</strong> us, I<br />

think—that he was going to be our champion.” 6<br />

“<strong>The</strong>re is no way to overstate the way in which this issue radicalized<br />

Slade,” says McGavick. “And the environmentalists had made it easy for<br />

him by attacking him in the ’86 campaign after he did so much to increase<br />

the wilderness. It seemed like spotted owl issues took up most <strong>of</strong><br />

every day for many <strong>of</strong> us. It changed the dynamic for Slade in a very positive<br />

way, though as the state drifted more urban it limited his upside <strong>and</strong><br />

made each election a fight from the start.”

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