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For Immediate Release:
5/24/2007
For More Information:
Contact Gina Goodhill
Preservation Associate
(916) 446-8062 ext. 104

Statement of Dan Jacobson on the House and Senate’s Push to Protect Our Last Wild Forests

We applaud Congressman George Miller for joining Congressmen Inslee (D-WA) and Ramstad (R-MN) to reintroduce the National Forest Roadless Area Conservation Act of 2007.  The bill will protect 4.4 million acres of national forest lands in California – and 58.5 million acres nationwide – from most logging and road-building.  The bill was introduced with a bipartisan group of 141 original cosponsors.  At the same time, Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and John Warner (R-VA) lead a group of 18 Senators in introducing a companion bill in the Senate.

 

The bill will codify the widely popular Roadless Area Conservation Rule which was finalized after years of scientific study, more than 600 public hearings, and more than 2.2 million public comments in support of protecting America’s last wild forests. This outpouring of public support added up to be the most comments ever received during a federal rulemaking process. 

 

The roadless rule is a balanced policy that protects the last third of our national forests while allowing new road construction in order to fight fires, ensure public safety, and allow brush clearing to protect forest health.  The roadless rule ensures that our national forests will continue to provide clean drinking water, habitat for wildlife, and endless opportunities for recreation and solitude.

 

The Bush administration continues to attack the roadless rule on multiple fronts.  In the courts, they filed an appeal with the 9th Circuit to overturn a decision that reinstated the 2001 Roadless Rule as the law of the land.  In the states, the administration has prioritized processing petitions that will remove the protections of the 2001 Roadless Rule from millions of acres of national forests.  It appears that the only thing the administration is worried about protecting is the profits of the timber industry.

 

The Bush administration should start protecting our last wild forests instead of the profits of the timber industry.  They should follow the lead of Representative Miller by enforcing the 2001 Roadless Area Conservation Rule, until Congress makes those protections permanent in a law.

 

With Memorial Day upon us and the summer right around the corner, let’s make sure that families in California and across the country have the opportunity to enjoy the splendor of our national forests now and for years to come.  That opportunity will be lost if we don’t act now to protect these precious public lands.