| The Adirondack Council |
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For more information:
John F. Sheehan
518-432-1770
Released, Tuesday, June 17, 2003
ALBANY, NY -- The Adirondack Council
today thanked Sen. Elizabeth Little and Assemblyman William Parment
for reaching an agreement that will increase the penalty for stealing
trees from the Adirondack and Catskill Forest Preserves from a
paltry $10 -- a fine set in 1909 -- to a minimum $250 per tree.
The bill passed the NYS Senate on Monday, June 16. The Assembly
version passed today.
"We are grateful that -- in the final day of this final week
of the 2003 legislative session -- Senator Little has made it
a priority to correct this long-standing injustice," said
Adirondack Council Executive Director Brian L. Houseal. "She
and Assemblyman Parment have agreed on new penalties for timber
theft much more closely resemble the current market value of the
trees and will discourage the theft of our forests, especially
the rare, high-value hardwoods and old-growth forests of the Adirondacks.
"The Adirondack Council has been urging the Legislature to
pass a bill like this for many years," Houseal said. "But
that is all water over the flume now. For the first time in nearly
a century, we won't be literally encouraging the dishonest to
steal trees from public or private lands.
"The old penalty was a joke," he said. "This new
one is no laughing matter."
The bill increases the penalty for the theft of trees from public
and private land from $10 per tree to $250 per tree, or treble
damages (three times the market value), or both. At the same time,
the legislation makes the act of illegally cutting timber a Class
A Misdemeanor under state law -- a criminal offense. The old law
considered illegal tree cutting to be a violation, punishable
only by a civil penalty. In order to seek jail time in the most
outrageous cases, the prosecutor had to prove that the act constituted
a separate criminal act.
In addition, the Department of Environmental Conservation or a
court could require the offender to repair the damage and to pay
restitution to the landowner reflecting the damage to the forest.
The $250 penalty could be waived if the defendant can prove "with
clear and convincing evidence" that he or she thought the
trees belonged to them or that they had a legal right to cut them.
Even inadvertent cutters would still be liable for repairing the
damage and reimbursing the rightful owner for the value of the
trees.
An additional provision of the bill was designed to give the DEC
Commissioner the right to review and comment upon any proposed
change in local law that restricts forest harvesting practices.
While local governments would be required to wait up to 45 days
for DEC to review and comment on a proposed law, local governments
would not be obligated to heed the commissioner's advice.
"The Adirondack Park has a handful of town and village laws
that are tougher than the timber harvesting requirements enforced
in the rest of the Park by the Adirondack Park Agency," Houseal
said. "We are pleased to see that this bill does nothing
to prevent other towns from enacting similar protective measures.
It only requires that state officials be given a chance to advise
them on the decision. Once they have that advice, they are free
to do as they wish."
If the Governor signs it, the new law would go into effect in
March, 2004.
The Adirondack Council is an 18,000-member, privately funded,
not-for-profit organization dedicated to ensuring the natural
character and ecological integrity of the Adirondack Park.