Our
Natural Legacy: The Value Of America's Roadless National Forests
November
2004
MoPIRG Foundation
Executive
Summary | News
Release
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Executive
Summary After
decades of scientific inquiry, 600 public hearings, and a record 1.6 million comments,
the Clinton administration enacted the Roadless Area Conservation Rule in January
2001 to protect 58.5 million acres of wild national forest land from most commercial
logging and road-building. The Roadless Rule ensures that our national forests
will continue to provide clean drinking water for millions of Americans, wildlife
habitat, endless recreational opportunities, and other important values. The rule
also allows the U.S. Forest Service to address the estimated $10.3 billion backlog
in needed roads maintenance instead of using taxpayer dollars to build new roads.
The American
people have spoken in favor of protecting roadless areas within our national forests.
If the volume of their voices could be measured by the comments already sent to
the Clinton and Bush administrations, the roar would be deafening. Prior to the
2004 comment period, Missouri residents had submitted 17,732 comments in favor
of protecting the state's 25,000 acres of roadless land.
Fully
understanding the public's dedication to protecting roadless areas requires looking
at their myriad economic and ecological benefits:
-
Sixty million Americans rely on drinking water from the national forests. Roadless
areas, for their pristine and road-free condition, provide some of the purest
of that water. In the Eastern Forest Service Region, which includes Missouri,
drinking water is worth $144.7 million annually.
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Non-motorized recreation has become more and more popular over time as Americans
participate in everything from bicycling to hunting in roadless areas. In 2001,
2.0 million Missouri residents took part in hunting, fishing, and wildlife-watching,
contributing $1.8 billion to the state economy.
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America's wildlife has seen much of its habitat lost to development in recent
decades. Some of the most unspoiled habitat for hundreds of threatened, endangered,
and declining species is found in roadless areas. Missouri's national forests
are home to eight at-risk species that could be harmed by destruction of roadless
areas.
Despite
the enormous benefits of national forests, historically, their value has been
pegged to the timber products they provide. The Forest Service, however, has sold
national forest land to timber companies at such low cost that the agency loses
millions of dollars each year.
National
forests are federal lands that belong to all Americans and deserve federal protection.
Unfortunately, the Bush administration has proposed repealing the Roadless Rule
and replacing it with a meaningless process that allows governors to seek protections
for roadless areas in their states—or seek logging, mining, and drilling for these
pristine forests instead. Even if a governor seeks protections, the Forest Service
could still refuse the proposal.
In
addition to repealing the Roadless Rule, the Bush administration has proposed
a dramatic change in the way all of our national forests are managed. At issue
are new regulations for the National Forest Management Act, the law that requires
each of the 155 national forests to have a management plan in place. The draft
regulations the administration proposed in December 2002 would weaken environmental
and wildlife protections and limit the public's ability to participate in decisions
that affect our national forests. Moreover, the Bush administration has already
pushed through numerous harmful policies, including the so-called Healthy Forests
Restoration Act, which increases logging under the guise of fighting forest fires.
Before finalizing
the proposal to repeal the Roadless Rule, the administration has two choices:
it can continue pandering to timber companies, mining companies, and energy companies
that stand to make millions in the short term at taxpayers' expense, or it can
choose to heed public opinion and preserve roadless areas to ensure that generations
to come enjoy the same benefits that we have.
The
right decision seems clear. Without question, roadless areas are one of the nation's
greatest natural assets; their ecological and economic value is too great to sacrifice.