|
Company Roots Out Environmental Damage
A Montana Firm Helps to Restore Mine-ravaged Land from the Ground Up
The Los Angeles Times; Los Angeles, Calif.; Sep 30, 2001; SUSAN
GALLAGHER;
Abstract:
Bitterroot Restoration Inc., headquartered in Corvallis, Mont., supplies
hardy native seedlings to heal disturbed land.
In an Arizona project, Bitterroot is working in the area of the Black
Mesa mine near Kayenta to restore plants significant in the Navajo
culture. They include pinyon pine, penstemon, Indian paintbrush and Utah
juniper. The fall planting is set for the last two weeks in October.
In Montana, Bitterroot operates from an old farm across from the Teller
Wildlife Refuge, in the southwest corner of the state.
Full Text:
(Copyright, The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 2001 Allrights
reserved)
When 46,000 plants are put in the ground on mined Navajo land in Arizona
in October, the work will be steered by a Montana company with a niche
in the vast business of trying to undo environmental damage.
Bitterroot Restoration Inc., headquartered in a historic farmhouse
outside Corvallis, Mont., found its footing by employing a comprehensive
approach to healing disturbed land.
Although many environmental consulting firms draw up a plan and then
have subcontractors do the work, Bitterroot tackles the job differently.
It does the planning, raises the plants used in helping sites recover,
employs the planting crews and performs the follow- up.
With expansion over the last 15 years, the company has added two
branches in California and employs about 85 people full time plus 50
seasonals.
Key to the business are Bitterroot's nurseries at Corvallis and Lincoln,
Calif., with combined annual production of more than 2 million plants
native to the places where they'll be used.
Bitterroot recently got a $5-million Army Corps of Engineers contract
for watershed and abandoned-mine work.
"There's a huge amount of [remediation] work going on out there right
now," said Pat Burke, a founder who got the idea for the company in the
mid-1980s as a University of Montana graduate student in plant ecology.
"It's a recognition that we can't go on forever causing major kinds of
environmental disturbances and doing nothing to clean them up," Burke
said. "The backlog is huge."
Bitterroot's ability to supply hardy native seedlings is a key feature
that distinguishes the company from other consultants, Burke said.
In the Arizona project, Bitterroot is working in the area of the Black
Mesa mine near Kayenta to restore plants significant in the Navajo
culture. They include pinyon pine, penstemon, Indian paintbrush and Utah
juniper. The fall planting is set for the last two weeks in October.
"There's a fair number of companies out there and more being added all
the time," said Vern Pfannenstiel, a project spokesman for Peabody
Western Coal Co., which hired Bitterroot for the Arizona work.
Pfannenstiel has used the company for about 15 years on a variety of
projects.
He figures Bitterroot's attention to detail in site preparation and
nursery procedures has doubled or tripled the survival rate of seedlings
at Black Mesa. Since 1996, the company has planted more than 100,000
trees, shrubs and other plants there.
"They're the best farmers in the business," said Carol Russell, who is
on the mining team at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's
regional office in Denver. "They seem to do a great job of getting
plants to grow where others aren't able to."
At Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego, Bitterroot is working
on a habitat project intended to help the California coastal
gnatcatcher, a threatened songbird. At the southern end of Lake Tahoe on
the California-Nevada border, the company has a project that includes
building wetlands where a parking lot once stood.
Other work has included flood recovery at Yosemite National Park;
efforts to improve habitat for threatened bull trout in the Thompson
River of Montana; environmental repair along the scenic Beartooth
Highway east of Yellowstone National Park; and revegetation to control
asbestos at a Coalinga, Calif., mine in the federal Superfund program.
The five-year, $5-million Corps of Engineers contract is for evaluation
of abandoned mine sites in various parts of the West and development of
plans to deal with the damage. The contract also includes watershed
planning for California's San Joaquin Delta and the Bay Area.
In Montana, Bitterroot operates from an old farm across from the Teller
Wildlife Refuge, in the southwest corner of the state.
More than half the work is in California, but Burke said the company is
based in Montana because that is where he and his colleagues want to
live.
Doing business from Montana means putting up with some inconveniences,
including lean air service. But Burke finds those balanced by many
things, including Montana's cachet. People like the notion of an
environmental company operating from a state known for its natural
splendor, he said.
Back to Top
|