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White House Aims to Abolish Logging Rule


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Jul 12, 8:37 PM (ET)

By BOB FICK

(AP) Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman, right, along with Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne, announces the...
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BOISE, Idaho (AP) - The Bush administration Monday proposed lifting a national rule that closed remote areas of national forests to logging, instead saying states should decide whether to keep a ban on road-building in those areas. Environmentalists immediately criticized the change as the biggest timber industry giveaway in history.

Under the proposal, governors would have to petition the federal government to block road-building in remote areas of national forests. Allowing roads to be built would open the areas to logging.

The rule replaces one adopted by the Clinton administration and still under challenge in federal court. It covers about 58 million of the 191 million acres of national forest nationwide.

The Bush administration heralded the plan as an end to the legal uncertainty overshadowing tens of millions of acres of America's backcountry.

"Our actions today advance the Bush administration's commitment to cooperative conserving roadless areas," Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman said in announcing the plan in the Idaho Capitol Rotunda.

Philip Clapp, president of the National Environmental Trust, called the administration proposal the biggest giveaway to the timber industry in history, arguing that many western states would likely press for development to help struggling rural economies.

"The idea that many governors would want to jump head first into the political snake pit of managing the national forests in their states is laughable," he said. "Besides, the timber industry has invested heavily for years in the campaigns of governors with the largest national and state forests, giving almost equally to Republicans and Democrats."

Under the proposal, the 58.5 million acres designated as roadless among the 191 million acres of national forest will be protected from development for another 18 months.

In 2006, each governor may submit a proposal either to continue protecting the roadless land or allow it opened to multiple use. The federal government would consider each state petition and then issue a regulation determining the extent of future roadless protection.

Idaho has the most land in the lower 48 states affected by the roadless designation - 9.3 million acres - and was one of the first states to challenge the Clinton administration rule.

A major point of contention in Idaho could be 200,000 acres in the Clearwater River area of north-central Idaho. The area is untrammeled, and conservationists want it preserved. But the Forest Service has proposed some timber sales in the area, and land managers believe logging would reduce the danger of wildfire and protect the basin's famed elk herd.

Veneman and Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne, a Republican, both argued that the proposal ends the legal uncertainty over the old rule and leaves forest management decisions with people most aware of local needs.

But New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a Democrat and Clinton administration energy secretary, accused the Forest Service of "walking away from environmental protection."

Richardson said he would petition for protection of all 1.1 million roadless acres in his state and urge other governors to do the same, declaring that "they should not open these areas, period."

Undersecretary of Agriculture Mark Rey said that if a state does not offer its own proposal on roadless land, the land would become part of the traditional planning process for each national forest. That process has called for development on 24 million of the 58 million acres that Clinton moved to protect.

Federal judges have twice struck down the Clinton rule, most recently in a Wyoming case decided in July 2003. That case, which environmentalists have appealed, is one of several pending legal challenges which have complicated efforts to issue a new plan.

The new plan will be published in the Federal Register this week, with a 60-day comment period extending into September.
 

HobRoff

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Sep 10, 2003
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I would encourage everyone to oppose this ruling. The reason being is it is pretty much pointless to be accessing these remote areas while the Forest Service is sitting on countless acres of mature second growth that are already roaded and could be harvested. There is usually a pretty evident reason why these areas were not accessed in the first place, many being of low commercial value.

What needs to happen is an aggressive management program to inventory these existing stands, maybe some along the fringes of these roadless areas, identify the ones that can handle intensive forestry and those that are too sensitive i.e little topsoil, endangered species, watershed etc and start getting some sales on the bid block and somehow block the silly bureaucratic rules and enviro lawsuits, if you revoke the roadless area rule lawsuits will start coming like buckshot and it will be years before anything of value comes along, talk about stirring up the pot and pushing peoples buttons, it is already a mess just trying to get a sale through now.

From the Cascade Crest to the East slope of the Rockies the art of Forestry takes on whole other perspective as generally is it is very hot and dry and things take twice as long to grow and recover from logging operations, you have to be pretty conscientous and light handed and having worked throughout the West I have seen very little progressive land management, it has been simply mining/high grading out the best and leaving the rest. The State of Colorado for instance has no Forest Practices to dictate some basic stewardship principals, at least they didn't a few years ago.

This is a complicated issue no doubt and people dedicate their lives to ensure wood will keep flowing out of the woods only to be stubbed by Politicians, Corporate room dictates and rebels without a clue, it gets really aggravating. But we keep plugging along.

I guess a good analogy here is the whole ANWR debate, drilling in ANWR is the stupid, lazy man's solution. In the lower 48 we have thousands of shut in wells of marginal production but new technologies exist that may allow bringing them back on line, also exploration for new oil/gas sites should not be hampered in the lower 48, to the west of ANWR and Prudhoe bay is the National Petroleum Reserve with existing leases in place. The basic fact is we do not need to enter ANWR at this time, same goes for the bulk of these roadless areas, it is just a quick and easy buck with development and ramification costs that we really don't have a handle on.

I have never worked in the East or SouthEast but hats off to those guys working in the woods back there, it is a different ball game.

Growing trees and harvesting timber - probably one of the most environmentally benign things people should be doing but there is little reason to enter these roadless areas.
 
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