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https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/f...S&cvid=68becbad73914cfca37a885c8cac87b7&ei=42
It’s a policy that prohibits the building of roads on 44.7 million acres of public lands (which was initially 58.5 million, but several states have carved out exceptions for themselves) that was implemented to conserve and protect just 2% of remaining American ecosystems from development.
That small percentage is a massive amount of land representing about 30% of the entire area managed by the U.S. Forest Service.
The rule was implemented after three years of analysis, with an exhaustive collaborative process that included over 400 public meetings, attended by more than 20,000 participants. During the public comment period, 1.6 million submissions were received, of which, about 95% supported roadless protections.
In the last 24 years, however, quite a bit has changed. Not just in terms of the political temperament of the nation, but what is transpiring in the forests and how land managers believe they are best stewarded.
NDA, and now they have catastrophic fires. There is way more to this article, just submitted a clip. What is interesting back when is they had 1.6 million submissions of which 95% supported roadless rule. Preservation and conservation activists were advised where to find the link to comment in the federal register. Regular Joes didn't comment.
This article included the link to the federal register to comment:
https://www.regulations.gov/commenton/FS-2025-0001-0001
To beat an activist, you have to become more active than they are active.
Federal government moves ‘Roadless Rule’ one step closer to repeal
In late June, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced at the Western Governors’ Association in New Mexico that the USDA would be repealing the 2001 Roadless Rule.It’s a policy that prohibits the building of roads on 44.7 million acres of public lands (which was initially 58.5 million, but several states have carved out exceptions for themselves) that was implemented to conserve and protect just 2% of remaining American ecosystems from development.
That small percentage is a massive amount of land representing about 30% of the entire area managed by the U.S. Forest Service.
The rule was implemented after three years of analysis, with an exhaustive collaborative process that included over 400 public meetings, attended by more than 20,000 participants. During the public comment period, 1.6 million submissions were received, of which, about 95% supported roadless protections.
In the last 24 years, however, quite a bit has changed. Not just in terms of the political temperament of the nation, but what is transpiring in the forests and how land managers believe they are best stewarded.
NDA, and now they have catastrophic fires. There is way more to this article, just submitted a clip. What is interesting back when is they had 1.6 million submissions of which 95% supported roadless rule. Preservation and conservation activists were advised where to find the link to comment in the federal register. Regular Joes didn't comment.
This article included the link to the federal register to comment:
https://www.regulations.gov/commenton/FS-2025-0001-0001
To beat an activist, you have to become more active than they are active.