Two former heads of the U.S. Forest Service to speak at UW-Stevens Point
10/19/2015
 
 
Join a discussion about conservation efforts in national forests as the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point hosts a former chief and a former deputy chief of the U.S. Forest Service on Thursday, Oct. 22. 

Beginning at 7 p.m. in Room 120 of the Trainer Natural Resources Building, former forestry service chief and UW-Stevens Point Professor Michael Dombeck and former deputy chief Jim Furnish will offer an open discussion hosted by the campus Society of American Foresters. The public may attend free of charge. 

The talk will follow a showing of “Seeing the Forest,” a 30-minute documentary about Siuslow National Forest on the west coast and its transition after the spotted owl crisis. Furnish was a supervisor there for seven years. 

Furnish is also the author of the memoir “Toward a Natural Forest: The Forest Service in Transition,” in which he offers personal insights and experiences from his 34 years in the forest service, including several under Dombeck. He was instrumental in creation of the Roadless Area Conservation and Forest Planning regulations and serves as a consulting forester in the Washington, D.C. area. 

Now retired, Dombeck served as a UW-Stevens Point professor of global conservation and UW System fellow after leaving the forest service. His has won the Presidential Rank – Distinguished Executive Award, Audubon Medal, Lady Bird Johnson Conservation Award and National Wildlife Federation’s Conservationist of the Year. He also served as interim director of the Bureau of Land Management. He was named a UW-Stevens Point Distinguished Alumnus in 1997.


Article Tags

CNR; Prosperous; Sustainable