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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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

eral forests. “Owls are important,” he said, “but people are more important<br />

than owls.” It was risky business for a politician who won a second<br />

term in the Senate by the skin <strong>of</strong> his teeth. Despite an environmental record<br />

that was creditable by any objective measure, dating back to his days<br />

in the Legislature pushing Jim Ellis’s Forward Thrust legislation, Gorton<br />

was now the greens’ public enemy No. 1. Polls suggested strong support<br />

statewide for preserving old-growth forests, even if that left timber towns<br />

in dire straits. <strong>The</strong> job loss from spotted owl set-asides was estimated at<br />

35,000 in some reports, although environmentalists said that was hyperbole.<br />

Gorton acknowledged that decades <strong>of</strong> wanton clear-cutting had decimated<br />

ancient forests. Those errors were being corrected by modern,<br />

sustained-yield forestry that respected biodiversity, he said, but the bulk<br />

<strong>of</strong> the new plantations wouldn’t be mature until the 21 st century. “<strong>The</strong><br />

1990s are crucial. To get to that sustained harvest, we have to make it<br />

through the 1990s.” Environmentalists, abetted by the liberal media, are<br />

elitists who “don’t really believe in the realities <strong>of</strong> reforestation,” Gorton<br />

said. “<strong>The</strong>y don’t connect timber with the realities <strong>of</strong> housing, paper <strong>and</strong><br />

furniture . . . with real people <strong>and</strong> real families.” 12<br />

Timber families took their cause to downtown Seattle. Aleda Dahlstrom<br />

held her 8-year-old daughter tight <strong>and</strong> told reporters her husb<strong>and</strong>’s<br />

Hoquiam sawmill was just one <strong>of</strong> many that provided family-wage jobs.<br />

“We want people to realize we are people. By shutting <strong>of</strong>f the log supply<br />

they are hurting our families.” 13<br />

A Seattleite who watched Gorton being huzzah’d at one such demonstration<br />

called it a “diesel Chautauqua” in a letter to the editor. It reminded<br />

him “<strong>of</strong> nothing so much as those antebellum Southerners put<br />

forward by Jefferson Davis to economically justify slavery. ‘Think <strong>of</strong> the<br />

jobs that will be lost,’ they cried, ‘consider the economic devastation to<br />

James Neel, a 9-year-old<br />

from Forks, with his aunt,<br />

Bev Larson, at a timber rally<br />

in Olympia in 1991. Brian<br />

DalBalcon/<strong>The</strong> Daily World

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