Local people community around GWEF constitutes rural community which has the general characteristics commonly found around forests in developing countries in tropical region, where in some situations the people community interacts directly with the forests and creates impacts which are not always good to the forest. Sometimes, such interactions, to a certain extent, damage the forest. If interaction between local people and GWEF is not properly managed, there would be pressure from the people to the forest in the form among other things of wood theft, firewood theft, and excessive amount of fire wood gathering. Residents around GWEF generally possess livelihood as farmers, animal husbandry farmers, motorcycle taxi driver, farm products traders, and factory workers. Ownership of farm land in the people community around GWEF is on the average less than 0.3 ha per family. Most farmers are tenant farmers who control only small area of land (on the average less than 0.5 ha). Land ownership and land control by the people, of these sizes, are relatively small, and this creates particular problem for the people’s welfare, and affect their interaction with GWEF