Forest Service Roadless Area Conservation: Text

Forest Service Roadless Area Conservation: Text PDF

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 660

ISBN-13:

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The Forest Service is proposing new regulations to protect inventoried roadless areas within the National Forest System. This final environmental impact statement (FEIS) responds to strong public sentiment for protecting roadless areas and the clean water, biological diversity, dispersed recreational opportunities, wildlife habitat, forest health, and other public benefits provided by these areas. This action also responds to budgetary concerns and the need to balance management objectives with funding priorities.

Protection of Roadless Areas

Protection of Roadless Areas PDF

Author: United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. Subcommittee on Forests and Public Land Management

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 64

ISBN-13:

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Forest Service Roadless Area Conservation

Forest Service Roadless Area Conservation PDF

Author: United States. Forest Service

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 530

ISBN-13:

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The Forest Service is proposing new regulations to protect certain roadless areas within the National Forest Service. This is the draft environmental impact statement for those areas.

Not Quite Wilderness

Not Quite Wilderness PDF

Author: Federico Cheever

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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During the past decade, no issue in the American West has been more controversial than the protection of roadless areas on both National Forest and Bureau of Land Management land. The current state of the roadless issue is confused, to put it mildly. The roots of the roadless dispute are nearly lost in the mists of time. The first thing to understand is the fundamentally different view different people have of roadless areas on public lands. To some, roadless areas are the hallmark of the absence of decision making. For these people, roadless areas are primarily areas of the public land to which no one has yet effectively appended a meaningful management designation. For these people, roadless is a designation which should cease to exist - the sooner the better - with some roadless lands congressionally designated as wilderness and others "opened" to multiple use. These people seek to settle the roadless issue. To other people roadless areas are a tangible, finite resource of incalculable value. Roadless areas have values that other areas do not. For these people, every new road and every new decision to allow road-based activities in a roadless area diminishes this resource. These people seek to protect the roadless resource.