Being a timber sale contract administrator meant working independently with Purchasers, logging contractors and sub-contractors. You were always subject to audits and inspections, sometimes scheduled and sometimes when you least expected it. It was important to have all agreements, minor contract changes, acceptance of work items and notices of non-compliance documented. Most inspections were performed by my immediate supervisor, who was either the District Timber Management staff assistant or designated Forest Service Representative and sometimes the District Ranger. They usually rode with me out to whatever sale(s) I was going to that day. Comments would be made about logging problems, why did I approve this or that and sometimes there were surprises that were beyond my control. One such case was on a salvage sale on the Cottage Grove District of the Umpqua National Forest. My supervisor, Wayne, was riding with me on a timber blow down salvage sale, don’t remember the sale name or the number of units. After visiting a few of the units, some with completed work and a unit where logging was still in progress I turned onto a road to show Wayne one more unit where wind thrown trees had been removed above the road. Wayne said there should be no units out this road since it was in spotted owl territory. I showed him the unit on the contract map and he was totally caught off guard. He said he would to talk to Jim, the presale technician about this. In reality the mistake was Wayne’s for not reviewing the completed contract package before it went up for bid.
One of my
first inspections by a forest review team under the Region 5 certification
program was when I worked on the Orleans District of the Six River National
Forest in the 1970’s. It was a large
sale purchased by Sierra Pacific Industries out of Arcata. It
was during fire season and the operators were required to have all the necessary
fire tools and equipment in place and in good working order. While inspecting the fire truck and hand tools
on a landing where yarding and loading was in progress the team focused their
attention on a D8 Cat that was parked off to the side and used to construct
landings. This piece of equipment was
required to have a fire extinguisher, an axe and shovel mounted on it, which it
did. A member of the team tried to
pull the shovel from the bracket, but only the wooden handle came out of the
shovel blade--not good. In addition to
that the purchaser was hauling logs over a segment of uncompleted road
reconstruction which is not allowed under the contract, unless otherwise agreed
to, which it wasn’t. Simply put I failed
and had no idea about the road with uncompleted reconstruction requirements. A letter was sent to the District Ranger by
the Forest Timber Staff officer on items in need of improvement.
While
working on the Greenville District of the Plumas National Forest the District
Ranger would make surprise visits on an active sale to see what was going
on. On one occasion he drove up to the
Davis Timber sale where they were hauling 60 loads a day from three tractor
sides on a 20 million board foot partial cut sale purchased by Louisiana
Pacific. He came across the logging
supervisor and asked if he had seen me lately.
The logging supervisor jokingly replied that he had not seen me in weeks. The Ranger was not amused.
Some Forest inspections
were made for log accountability. One
such inspection was on a sale being hauled off the east side of the Gold Beach District
of the Siskiyou National Forest to a mill in Grants Pass. The Forest Check Scaler and my supervisor
were with me as we were stopping log trucks at a wide turnout along the haul
route to inspect load receipts, number of logs on the load, painting of logs
for export control and branding of logs.
One truck driver for Ireland Trucking did not stop and yelled out the
window he did not have time to f**k with us.
We got the truck number and reported it to the Purchaser. An apologetic letter was received from the
Purchaser and the driver was told to apologize to us, which he did. We
learned he was the son-in-law of the owner.
The forest
timber staff assistant for contract administration on the Siskiyou was named
Don and he would make early morning visits at the Gold Beach office when we
usually came to work at 7 am. He must have left Grants Pass at 4 am to make
the three hour drive. He showed up one morning asking where I was
going that day. I told him I was
planning on staying in the office, just to give him a bad time. His reply was no, we are going out to look at
some of your sales. Don was an intense
character and non-compliance with fire precautionary requirements got his
attention. On one sale we walked down
to check the clearing around cable blocks where a 10 foot radius clearing was
required in case of sparks flying from the moving cable. When we got down to the block the hook
tender was busy scraping the clearing to achieve 10 feet and we suspected he
saw us coming and did not want to get in trouble. Don got into a rampage, telling the hook
tender how important fire prevention is and how it did not matter if they had
1000 men on the landing with the best fire tools that still would not prevent a
fire. The hook tender had dealt with Don
before on this subject and quietly listen.
In 1981 I
went through the Region 6 certification program, which required passing a
written test on the contract and passing a field inspection of an active
sale. The inspection team was made up
of a team leader, the Siskiyou Forest Timber Staff Office, who was also the
Contracting Officer, a soil scientist, a couple of people from other Districts
with a back ground in timber management.
The clear-cut units on this sale were very steep and required full log
suspension to reduce soil disturbance. This
required the logger to rig tail trees at the bottom of the units at least 20
feet up the trees and to guy the tail trees back to keep them from being pulled
over. There was no way to obtain the necessary
deflection by going to the opposite slope because of the distance and lack of
big trees. Due to the shallow soils and
steep angles it was impossible from not pulling over the tail trees, even by guying
them back I had the forest logging
engineer come to the sale to verify the impossibility of obtaining full log
suspension. An agreement was written up allowing the operator
to yard with only one end suspension. On
some skyline roads they did obtain some full suspension. Water bars were required to be constructed
by hand as designated by myself where needed.
Grass seeding was also required during the fall seeding period in
October. I received a conditional
certification pending acceptance of the seeding and fertilization requirements.
The Purchaser
hired a sub-contractor to apply the seed and fertilizer during the seeding
period. This contractor called me to
inform me they had completed the seeding and needed my acceptance in order to
get paid by the Purchaser. I went up to
inspect their work and noticed seed and fertilizer on the cut and fill slopes
of all the landings. When I walked down
into two of the steep units I saw no seed where it was needed. I inform the sub-contractor of this and he replied
that they thought I would not go down there to look and said they would go back
and do those disturbed areas. A week
later it was inspected again and accepted.
I became the first certified sale administrator on the Siskiyou.
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