Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Township Committee TERMINATES RRP Forest Management Plan

Roaring Rock Park Autumn 2021
Roaring Rock Park - Autumn 2021
Washington Township, Warren County, NJ
GOOD NEWS !!!

During the November 16th, 2021 open public meeting, Washington Township Warren County NJ Committee unanimously voted to adopt Resolution 21-193 ...

Washington Township Warren County NJ Resolution 21-193 that terminates Roaring Rock Park FMP

... terminating the Forest Management Plan designed for Roaring Rock Park.  As an outcome, we do not anticipate further logging of the park as outlined under this ten year plan.

Team SRRP thanks the Committee for their decision, and those of you who donated their time and resources to get to this point!

What lies next ?
Blue Trail descent Roaring Rock Park Autumn 2021
Descending the Blue Trail towards Brass Castle Creek
Washington Township, Warren County, NJ

Our team intends to evolve towards being more proactive, constructively engaging the Township to preserve and improve the park and other passive recreational sites like it.   We hope you will join us as we move forward.  Check back here frequently, follow us on social media using the links at the bottom of this page and look for future email newsletters to learn more.

Again -- THANK YOU for your support!

Saturday, October 16, 2021

An educator critically reads the forest management plan

Sarah Hare Hope NJ

Sarah Hare, a reading specialist and Hope New Jersey resident, provided these public meeting comments during the March 16th, 2021 Township Committee meeting, reflecting on her impressions when she gave a critical reading of the Township's forest management plan.

Sarah Hare March 16 2021 Township Meeting comments

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Hurricane Ida's impact on the June 2021 logging sites

Hurricane Ida's impact on Roaring Rock Park's June 2021 logging sites

If you are curious how the remnant of Hurricane Ida impacted Roaring Rock Park, let's take a look. Members of SaveRoaringRockPark.org visited RRP on Sept 3rd to survey the June 2021 logging sites. The aftermath of the storm on the logging areas is not pretty, but fully expected.

After the Washington Township's logging contractors bulldozed access roads at the sites, they used skid steer machinery to haul out tree logs towards awaiting tractor trailers.   This hauling activity left ruts in the access roads. Since no remediation was performed after work wrapped up, drainage issues on these roads now exist.

Hurricane Ida's impact on Roaring Rock Park's June 2021 logging sites

Storm water, which had previously flowed downslope directly into Brass Castle Creek, is now impeded from doing so because of the presence of the rutted access roads. Washington Township has NO PLAN or commitment to go back and remediate conditions at the June 2021 logging sites.

Hurricane Ida's impact on Roaring Rock Park's June 2021 logging sites

Since no site remediation was performed, soil erosion conditions exist. As a result of the heavy rains, loosened soil and the tree tops left by the logging contractors have washed down into Brass Castle Creek.

With no plans to remediate this site, soil erosion conditions will persist.

Keep in mind: 

  1. The Forest Management Plan is a 10 year plan; 
  2. The June 2021 logging activity is only Phase 1; 
  3. Phase 2 is planned to start fall / winter 2022;
  4. Intense summertime storms will keep occurring;  
  5. Snowmelt will yield similar results.

It is not hard to imagine the scale of devastation ten years of "Forest Management" will have on Roaring Rock Park if future logging activities are executed, by the Township's logging contractors, as they have during Phase 1, June 2021.

Residents are urged to contact Washington Township and voice opposition to Roaring Rock Park's "Forest Management Plan" before it wreaks more devastation on the forest, the wildlife it hosts, Brass Castle Creek and its native fish species.

Hurricane Ida's impact on Roaring Rock Park's June 2021 logging sites

Visit our web site SaveRoaringRockPark.org to learn more about our concerns, what we are doing about them, and how you can help.


Saturday, August 28, 2021

Logging Inappropriate for Roaring Rock Park

Have you heard about the current logging underway at Roaring Rock Park, the beautiful, 400-acre wooded preserve in Washington Township, Warren County, NJ? Much has been said lately about severe environmental damage that would result if the Township’s “Forest Management Plan” (FMP) is enacted. Without stakeholder input, residents and environmental groups only recently heard about the FMP, although the project had been in development by the Township for at least five years. I initially thought it might be an opportunity to improve this woodlot. As a former Assistant Director of the NJDEP Division of Parks & Forestry and an experienced and nationally-certified parks & recreation professional serving as land manager and agency head on municipal, county and state levels for 42 years, however, I found this FMP sorely lacking.

NJ Highlands Coalition representatives and I advised the Township to limit their logging to winter months to minimize erosion and soil compaction when the soil is frozen and the vegetation is dormant. They said they would reassess the situation and wouldn’t proceed without further study. We recommended the following FMP amendments:

  1. Develop a forest restoration plan to replicate the existing eastern deciduous forest ecosystem.
  2. Develop a strategy for addressing invasive plant species, which spread to fill in the holes after the trees fall. 
  3. Develop a deer management plan, as deer will decimate any native seedlings that manage to grow in those opened areas.

A robust, fully funded restoration plan that includes invasive plant and deer management is absent from the FMP.

With experience operating deer management programs, I offered to assist the Township in developing a no-cost and effective deer management plan. In addition, highly qualified experts from the NJ Highlands Coalition had offered to conduct - also at no charge - surveys of rare plants and wildlife species of special concern.

June 2021 logging activity Roaring Rock Park close to Brass Castle Creek
Logging activity
close to Brass Castle Creek

We warned the Township that 10’ wide corridors would have to be cleared to accommodate the “skid steer” machinery used to drag out heavy tree trunks. The weight of the machinery and trees would compact the root systems of the flanking tress, and eventually cause their death. We reminded them that Brass Castle Creek is a Category 1 stream, worthy of the standard DEP 300’ activity-free buffer. It’s also one of only 36 exceptional waterways statewide designated with special regulations as Wild Trout Streams by the DEP Division of Fish & Wildlife, who rated Brass Castle Creek as “excellent” and “optimal” to support the habitat of sensitive species like Brook Trout and Northern Two-lined Salamander, after inspections conducted in 2016 and 2018.

I was shocked to see “Phase I” logging begin on June 21st, the worst possible time of the year because spring and early summer is songbird nesting season. Trees with dozens, if not, hundreds of nests were toppled. It’s also when amphibians, reptiles and sensitive aquatic species emerge. Now, conditions due to logging are horrendous. Multiple haul roads were cut, but no remediation was done to restore muddy road conditions. With heavy summer rain events, mud and silt will run unchecked into Brass Castle Creek. The logger seems to care only about taking marketable logs off site, as all of the tree crowns are piled deeply on site, crushing forest floor habitat. Those piles of drying branches and leaves will add to the forest floor fuel load, compounding the risk of wildfire.

The evidence of critical destruction is apparent on the forest floor. My question to the Washington Township Committee, and indeed, the public who elected them is will you allow this tragedy to continue, or will you do the right thing by promoting reforestation and stopping further logging? What will it be?


John G. Trontis, CPRP
Certified Professional Recreation and Parks

Before his retirement, Trontis was the Assistant Director of the New Jersey DEP Division of Parks and Forestry. Prior to that role, he was Director of Parks and Recreation for Hunterdon County.  Despite being a retired full time public servant, he keeps himself busy as a Trustee of the Warren County Parks Foundation and a District Firewarden for the NJ Forest Fire Service.  He currently resides in Washington Township, Warren County, New Jersey.

BE ADVISED: The NJDEP neither endorses nor opposes the views expressed in this article or the activities of saveroaringrockpark.org in this matter.

Thursday, August 26, 2021

Project outcomes are not always according to plan

tree crowns discarded on RRP forest floor increasing fire load and hazard
Discarded tree crowns which increases fire load
Roaring Rock Park, Warren County, NJ

This is especially true with the Forest Management Plan (FMP) now being executed at Roaring Rock Park, by the Washington Township Warren County NJ municipal government and its logging contractor.

How it started...

If you talk to proponents of forest management, you often hear that managed tree harvesting is a means to reduce the risk of

  1. forest fire hazards, and   
  2. legal liability stemming from potential lawsuits raised by victims harmed by falling dead trees.    

To achieve this goal at Roaring Rock Park, one would think the logging contractor, hired by the municipal government, would need to remove diseased and dead trees from the forest.

How is it going?

The municipal government, through its hired logging contractor, has started to log the park in June 2021, kicking off ten years of tree harvesting.   So will the recent logging activity lead to reduced risks? 

The "reduce forest fire risks" "benefit"

This is a large debate now, as you see forest fires raging in places such as California, Australia and even the Pinelands in southern New Jersey.   You hear that removing trees will reduce the fire load within the forest.

Aside from this ongoing debate, did the outcome of recent logging at Roaring Rock Park, decrease the fire load?

What occurred: the Township's logging contractor cut down mature healthy trees.  As they did this, they lopped off the tree crowns (tree tops) and discarded them on the forest floor.     

As these discarded tree crowns die and rot, they will increase the risk of forest fire by increasing the fire load of the park.   

The "dead trees falling on people" threat

If you observed the tree extraction by the loggers, you will notice that the logs taken were not diseased or dead.   They came from mature healthy trees that were not "ready to fall on residents."


Off to a bad start, let's get back on track

Our group urges Washington Township to:
  1. stop the current logging activity which not only harms the ecology of the park, but runs counter to the benefits its touts, and 
  2. inform the public through regular public meetings that state, on public record, the outcome of recent logging activities and plans for the future phases over the ten year FMP period. 
  3. meet regularly with the New Jersey Highlands Coalition to design a more ecologically responsible FMP that reduces the harm to the forest ecology and wildlife that lives within it.
  4. monitor future logging activity to minimize deviations from the plan.

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Commercial logging has started at Roaring Rock Park

Commercial logging machinery at Roaring Rock Park
Commercial logging machinery at Roaring Rock Park


In June 2021, Washington Township started commercial logging at Roaring Rock Park, waving off concerns expressed in the open public meeting on March 16th 2021.   Their decision to proceed runs counter to concerns raised by Warren County Board of Commissions regarding Forest Management Plans, and identified in their resolution adopted May 12th 2021 which opposes state legislation mandating such activity on New Jersey Public Lands.   Similar resolutions identifying the harmful effects of Forest Management has been passed by other local municipalities and counties, namely Hunterdon and Monmouth counties and several local governmental bodies.

If you are concerned about how commercial logging, performed under the context of a "Forest Management Plan",  will impact the park, you can do several things:

  1. if you are a resident, write your elected officials, and express your concerns;
  2. attend the next open public regular meeting, and express your views in person.   They occur the third Tuesdays of each month, and the public is afforded an opportunity to speak out on issues that are on, and not on, the agenda.  If public speaking is not your strong point, consider writing a letter and ask the Town Clerk to enter it into the public record;
  3. show your public support by hosting a lawn sign.

    Do you want to host a lawn sign in your front yard?


    Roaring Rock Park Lawn Sign June 2021

    To show your support publicly, SaveRoaringRockPark.org and its affiliate the New Jersey Highlands Coalition (NJHC), are offering these lawn signs to area residents.   Although not required, donations are greatly appreciated to offset the printing costs.


    Are you interested in hosting one?   If you are...

    THANK YOU !!!


    Here is what you can do to obtain one:
    1. Send an email to lawnsigns@saveroaringrockpark.org to make delivery arrangements.
    2. Please consider donating to help us be successful.  Click HERE to access our donation page. 

    THANK YOU AGAIN FOR HELPING
    SAVE ROARING ROCK PARK !!!

    Commercial logging machinery at Roaring Rock Park
    Commercial logging machinery at Roaring Rock Park

    Wednesday, June 2, 2021

    Washington Borough, Hunterdon County NJ oppose forest management bills

    Shabbacong Creek, Shabbacong Mountain Preserve, Washington Borough, Warren County NJ
    Shabbacong Creek
    downslope from Shabbacong Mountain Preserve

    Washington Borough, Warren County NJ

    On Tuesday June 1st, 2021 the local municipal council of Washington Borough in Warren County and Hunterdon County Board of Commissioners passed resolutions in opposition to three bills (A-4843/S-3549 A-4844/S-3550 A-4845/S-3548) being considered by the New Jersey state legislature.   These two local municipalities' actions followed that of Warren County on May 12th, 2021.

    If passed, these bills would have a devastating effect on New Jersey public lands, for parcels whose size is as small as twenty five (25) acres.   These bills will mandate municipalities to obtain and implement "Forest Management Plans" (FMPs), similar to the one being considered for Roaring Rock Park in Washington Township.  These "plans", despite their benign sounding titles, are primarily commercial logging plans whose primary intent is to transform New Jersey public lands into large scale tree farms, and away from what should be their purpose: to preserve, protect and promote their natural resources and to provide recreational opportunities to residents.  

    For Washington Borough the impact would be realized on the Shabbacong Mountain Preserve, an approximate 80 acre tract of land acquired with Green Acre Funding.   Washington Borough residents, in coordination with the local municipality, have designated this property for recreational use.

    The actions of Washington Borough and Hunterdon County acknowledge:

    1. These bills will essentially create new unfunded mandates, requiring compliance by local government to state law while not providing state funding to local municipalities to facilitate compliance, and remediation of the damage that will result from logging activities;
      1. Adding insult to injury, these bills will prohibit local governments, and their taxpayers, from influencing activities arising from FMPs (the same constituents who would be paying for the implementation!);
      2. These bills will primarily facilitate commercial logging activities, not the retention, protection and promotion of the natural resources (trees, water and wildlife) that reside on New Jersey's public lands (the same resources that make the lands valuable in the first place!)

      Washington Borough and Hunterdon County join a growing list of local municipalities and organizations in opposition to these bills:

      1. Washington Borough, Warren County
      2. Warren County
      3. Hunterdon County    
      4. Monmouth County
      5. Ringwood
      6. West Milford
      7. Raritan
      8. Buena Vista
      9. Clinton
      10. Hardyston
      11. Washington Township, Burlington County
      12. Harding Township 
      13. Rockleigh
      14. Tenafly 
      15. Parsippany – Troy Hills 
      16. South Brunswick 
      17. Lacey Township 
      18. Shamong Township
      19. Princeton
      20. New Jersey League of Municipalities

      We commend Washington Borough Council and the Hunterdon Board of County Commissioners for adopting a well written resolution and proclamation that acknowledge the ecological and recreational value of public lands and forests, and their positive effects on making their communities desirable places to live.   

      Below are images of the adopted Borough resolution and Hunterdon County proclamation. We urge local New Jersey municipalities to consider adopting similar resolutions, especially if they have open public space greater than twenty five (25) acres.


      Featured Posts

      Recent Posts

      Our fellow advocacy groups

      Follow us on social media!