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rox63
http://www.lightupthedarkness.org/blog/def...ew=plink&id=841

QUOTE
Bush Administration Opens National Forests to Roads, Logging and More
5 May 2005

In yet another blow to the environment under the Bush administration, the way has been paved for road building, logging and commercial ventures on nearly one third of all National Forest lands. The K Street lobbyists for logging and mining companies have obviously been very, very busy greasing the wheels and whatever else necessary.

The 58.5 million acres involved, mainly in Alaska and in western states, had been put off limits to development by former President Clinton, eight days before he left office in January 2001.

Under existing local forest management plans, some 34.3 million acres of these pristine woodlands could be opened to road construction. That would be the first step in allowing logging, mining and other industry and wider recreational uses of the land. Under proposed rules, new management plans have to be written for the other 24.2 million acres before road building can commence.

Governors have 18 months to submit petitions to the U.S. Forest Service, challenging either the old plan to stop development, or calling for new plans to allow it.

Roadless areas in national forests stretch among 38 states and Puerto Rico. But 97 percent, or 56.6 million acres, are found in 12 states: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming.

Environmentalists say the new rule also would let the administration rewrite the forest management plans to lift restrictions against development on most of that forest land.

"Yesterday, nearly 60 million acres of national forests were protected and today as a result of deliberate action by the administration they are not," said Robert Vandermark, director of the Heritage Forests Campaign, run by a coalition of environment groups. "The Bush administration plan is a 'leave no tree behind' policy that paves the way for increased logging, drilling and mining in some of our last wild areas."
heritage
Editorial: Road rules / Administration delivers blow to conservation
Wednesday, May 11, 2005
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05131/502199.stm

If ever officials could be accused of not seeing the forest for the trees, it is members of the Bush administration. They have looked at protected national forests -- environmental refuges for wildlife, green lungs for an increasingly urbanized America -- and have seen only an opportunity for future logging, mining and drilling.

The key to such commercial activity is building roads. In the dying days of the Clinton administration, a rule was enacted that put 58 million acres of national forest off-limits to road building -- and thus development. This included 24 million acres previously protected.

Although the rule was promulgated after a lengthy series of public hearings, President Clinton can be faulted for not moving earlier. However, what was belatedly done was well done.

To be sure, the rule was highly controversial and led to nine lawsuits involving seven states, but it was much admired by environmental groups and others with an appreciation of America's unspoiled places. It did, after all, offer the chance of permanent protection to nature's last redoubts.

That all changed last week when the Forest Service announced a new rule for its roadless areas. Talked up as a better way, one that will be better informed by site-specific information, the rule overthrows the blanket protection and puts in place a system that will inevitably lead to roads being built where they will bring short-term gain to commercial interests at long-term cost to the environment.

It is true that road building will not be general (the 24 million acres protected before 2001 will remain protected) and it may be that the wisdom of conservation will continue to hold sway in many areas. The Allegheny National Forest is the only area in Pennsylvania that might be affected by the rule change -- and only 23,150 acres out 513,000 acres at that -- but Gov. Ed Rendell has promised to protect the area.

Under the new roadless rule, state governors have 18 months to send petitions for roadless areas to the U.S. secretary of agriculture. But there's no guarantee that their wishes will prevail. Although it is designed to be a collaborative process between the federal government and the states, this is federal land subject to federal authority.

Unfortunately, as seen in the current push in Congress to allow oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the Bush administration can be trusted to see environmental issues only through business-friendly lenses. It hardly inspires confidence that Mark Rey, the Agriculture Department's undersecretary who directs forest policy and who will help review state petitions, is a former timber industry lobbyist.

Effectively dismantling the old roadless rule was a mistake, and Americans who love the environment are justified in fearing that one new road has already been built and paved -- the road to ruin.
heritage
Political cartoon

Massacre
Thursday, May 19, 2005

http://www.post-gazette.com/robrogers/
Peggy
I nearly cringe omg.gif when I think of Bush and logging.
My mind always wanders to the image of the idiot laughing, shrugging his shoulders, and saying, "Got wood?" Grrrr!!!!! I get angry every time I think about it… and disgusted....and a little depressed.
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