A federal judge stopped a large timber sale in the Lolo Creek drainage of the Nez Perce-Clearwater National Forest, saying federal officials failed to consider the latest information on steelhead abundance.

Judge B. Lynn Winmill of Boise ruled Wednesday that the U.S. Forest Service and National Marine Fisheries Service relied on outdated steelhead numbers when they approved the Lolo Insect and Disease project in parts of the Upper Lolo, Musselshell, Middle Lolo and Eldorado creek watersheds. The project that includes clear-cut-like harvest practices and would require the construction of 13 miles of temporary road is projected to produce 44 million board feet of timber and help sustain up to 963 jobs.

Because wild steelhead that are protected as threatened under the Endangered Species Act spawn in streams within the project area, the Forest Service was required to consult with the National Marine Fisheries Service to make sure logging wouldn’t unduly harm the fish.

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