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Oregon's best Congressman

Posted by Sean Stevens at Aug 05, 2008 12:00 AM |

During the late 1970s and early 1980s Oregon's best congressman was from Ohio.

Oregon's best Congressman

John Seiberling, September 8, 1918 - August 2, 2008

-by Andy Kerr

Big Timber reigned supreme and Republican Mark Hatfield, the pacifist timber beast, was senior senator and dean of the delegation. Democrat Jim Weaver of Eugene, representing Oregon's 4th District, was the strongest voice for wilderness, wild rivers and old trees. Second best for the wild was Republican Senator Bob Packwood. In 1980 Democrat Ron Wyden was elected in Oregon's Third District and evidence of a changing and greening delegation. The rest of the delegation ranged from awful to horrible.

John Seiberling, heir to a tire fortune, was chair of the Subcommittee on National Parks and Public Lands of the Interior and Insular Affairs (some said that Seiberling would make the entire state of Oregon a Wilderness if he could. St. John, as Oregon wilderness activists belovedly referred to him, wouldn't go that far, but he'd have saved all the forest and desert roadless areas in a heartbeat if he could.)

Seiberling visited Oregon several times, holding both field hearings and taking field trips to see the controversial areas in question. Usually the smartest and most astute guy in the room, Seiberling was a gentle man that could hold forth equally on French poetry (recitation in French, of course) or cubic feet of wood growth per acre per year.

Seiberling took a field trip to the Umpqua National Forest in the early 1980s. Douglas County was ground zero in the wilderness war. The Umpqua had no designated Wilderness and conservationists prioritized three of nineteen inventoried roadless areas (Boulder Creek, Mount Thielsen and the Rogue-Umpqua Divide [all now units of the National Wilderness Preservation System]). The field trip took a couple of days and the Forest Service tried to control the itinerary. Timber industry and conservation representation were carefully limited with two representatives of each side. The Forest Service staff were all in full dress uniform, but were limited in numbers as well. At one point, taking a little walk in the woods to see some point, we came to a little clearing with coffee and doughnuts on a table with not a person around. It was provided by the Forest Service, but the hospitality detail hid in the woods lest the agency have more boots on the tour than allowed

The Forest Service tried to keep the tour route along major highways that had scenic buffers. I'd suggested to Andy Wiessner, Seiberling's trusted staffer, that John, as we approached the turnoff, demand an unscheduled detour up the Rock Creek road off the North Umpqua Highway. John did. All Forest Service staff protested (too much) and the caravan turned north. We went a few miles up and came to an overlook. As we all gazed over the infamous "O&C checkerboard" of alternating sections (square miles) of public (Bureau of Land Management) forestlands and private timberlands, the Forest Service was in full spin mode. They said that we were looking at BLM and private, not national forest. Seiberling offered to further modify the tour to go looking for equally horrid Forest Service clear-cuts. The Smokies demurred. A timber industry representative gamely tried to portray the devastation as good forestry as did the lower-level Forest Service employees. The latter were quieted by their superiors before they had their heads handed to them by St. John as did the timber guy. It is the only time I ever heard Seiberling raise his voice. "Don't try to tell me this is good!" he inveighed. After John finished his chastising sermon, we all silently got back in the vans and drove on.

The tour ended in Roseburg (it then rhymed with Nuremberg). The industry and their locals got some exclusive face-time with John.

Conservationists had their own quality time the evening before at the Steamboat Inn. The good wine flowed freely as the conversation. John and I did a spontaneous duet (the last time I have ever sang), as his powers of recitation were far beyond classical French.

After the industry face time with John ended, the entourage was off to the airport for a flight up to Portland via the Coast Range to see some roadless areas from above (and all those clear-cuts in between). Weaver hated flying and begged off and drove back to Eugene. I suspect Weaver also had gotten wind of an industry demonstration awaiting Seiberling at Roseburg International Airport. As we entered the air field, our Forest Service vans were surrounded by demonstrating loggers and millworkers. No police were present and the vans started to rock. The Forest Service was in full mission-mode: get the delegation safely on the planes and out of here (I concurred with that mission). A District Ranger (Vietnam vet, I’m pretty sure) was driving our van and one protester who got too close was decked with a left jab out the driver's window. The vans rocked more, but continued forward.

A 3-foot high cyclone fence separated the demonstrators from the aircraft and us, so we all quickly emptied the vans and headed straight for the aircraft. All but John Seiberling. I was belted next to a Republican staffer and we were wondering what the delay was. We crawled out of the plane and found Seiberling addressing the crowd. He never shouted and their shouting diminished as he continued to talk. The hand-painted signs they were holding stopped shaking or even ended up resting upside down on the ground. Seiberling told them why he thought Wilderness was important, but so were their jobs. He asked them if it was not better for him to come out and take a look rather than just make decisions in Washington, DC. He talked about 10 minutes as those of us on our side of the fence marveled at this statesman that was John Seiberling. On the other side of the fence, Jim Geisinger, then of Douglas Timber Operators now of Associated Oregon Loggers, stood with his head in hands in despair of how his carefully orchestrated demonstration was turning out.

Seiberling’s aides were literally pulling him to the aircraft. As John Seiberling said goodbye to those millworkers and loggers, they gave him a heartfelt round of applause.

-Andy

Note: Seiberling passed away Saturday, August 2 at the age of 89.

Thanks Andy for the Seiberling story

Posted by Tim Lillebo at Aug 05, 2008 01:29 PM
And then there was the time in early 1980s when John had a huge entourage following him to the proposed North Fork John Day Wilderness in NE Oregon. He was out to NE Oregon for a big wilderness hearing in La Grande and he wanted to visit some proposed wilderness areas. The FS only wanted to show him some beetle killed lodgepole pine, so he asked us where to go and I said we must see the best wild salmon and steelhead stream left in eastern Oregon, the North Fork John Day River.

John got some national guard Viet Nam vintage helicopters to fly us around to the tune of Wagner's "Flight of the Valkyries". They flew us into a grassy spot the size of twenty postage stamps. Scared and reluctant Forest Service personnel, county commissioners, and timber industry, joined us and John and Andy Wiessner as we hiked down the trail very late in the afternoon. The further we walked along the River the closer the sun got to the horizon and the FS, county guys, and timber guys turned around as John just kept cruising down the trail. At last, it was just Andy Wiessner and I, who followed John. The sun had set and the shadows engulfed the river canyon in a delightful red glow. Andy Wiessner finally called to John who was way ahead, and said, "it is getting dark John, and all the others are waiting, and it's at least an hour back". Without stopping or turning, John said, "Just one more bend". As we watched him disappear around the next bend we could hear him singing the old song, "On the Sunny Side of the Street"

A dern good chunk of the North Fork John Day is now Wilderness

-Tim Lillebo

Andy's story captures John Seiberling's persona and effectiveness well

Posted by James Monteith at Aug 05, 2008 01:54 PM
What I remember most (and he did it frequently) were Seiberling's delightful coups de grace' during his many Congressional field hearings. These politically charged media events often were held in rural districts of Members who opposed whatever Wilderness bill the Subcommittee was considering, which as we all know was John's style.

Predictably, after the local Congressional Rep would confess, upon grilling, that he had never actually been in most (none) of the proposed Wilderness Areas in his own district, Seiberling would recall his often-numerous field trips into these same local areas (usually made with county commissioners, USFS smokies, maybe ODFW & local press as well as us) with his irresistibly witty, site-specific observations & memories that would mortally embarrass the local Member and almost always result in the area(s) eventually being added to the National Wilderness System.

Or, as we should call it, the House that John built.

Thanks John- as Andy noted, you were Oregon's best Congressman ever! And thanks Mr. Wiessner, we all know what you did for Oregon & we owe you.


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