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Denver Post
Forest roadless rule reversed
4.4 million Colo. acres on the list
By Steve Lipsher
Denver Post Staff Writer
In one of its most sweeping environmental decisions to date, the Bush administration on Thursday rolled back protections for huge swaths of roadless areas in national forests, potentially opening them for logging, gas exploration and mining.
The long-anticipated reversal of the "roadless rule" gives state governors 18 months to request preservation of any roadless areas under guidelines crafted by the Forest Service. Otherwise, the land will be available for uses spelled out under specific forest-management plans.
"The reality is, the status on the ground tomorrow isn't going to be any different than it was yesterday," said Mark Rey, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's undersecretary for natural resources and environment. "We have for the past four years protected (roadless areas) on an interim basis, and we will continue the protection until the state rules are complete."
Environmentalists, however, lambasted the new rule, which overturns an initiative released in the waning days of the Clinton administration that banned development on 58.5 million acres designated as roadless areas in 39 states.
"The administration's decision today is nothing less than an outright repeal of the roadless rule and shows blatant disregard for the concerns of the public," said William Meadows, president of the Wilderness Society.
The new rule could open up 4.4 million acres in Colorado classified as roadless and not otherwise given wilderness designations.
Anticipating the new federal rule, Gov. Bill Owens has worked with legislators, industry groups and environmentalists to craft a bill - expected to be sent to his desk in the next few days - establishing a 13-member task force that will hold public hearings and make recommendations on roadless lands for his final petition to the Forest Service.
"It's going to work very well in this state," said Dan Hopkins, spokesman for the Republican governor. "This is very much a grassroots effort. This gives the decision-making authority to the states and provides opportunities to the people throughout the state, case by case, community by community, to provide input. ... It's so much better than some bureaucrat in Washington, D.C., making the decisions for the counties of Colorado."
Western Republicans praised the plan, while Democrats generally panned it.
But Rep. John Salazar, D-Manassa, whose Republican-leaning district includes most of Colorado's roadless areas, said he has always supported multiple
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uses on public land but sought to stay out of the fray.
"I need to be really careful on this one. ... I have to be middle of the road on this one," he said.
Critics point to the $10 billion backlog in maintenance on existing Forest Service roads as one of the pragmatic reasons for the popular roadless rule, passed in the last eight days of Bill Clinton's second term.
"It makes little sense to build new roads when the Forest Service cannot take care of its existing road network," said Chris Wood, Trout Unlimited's vice president for conservation programs.
Environmental groups argued that stripping protections for roadless lands can destroy the wild nature of many areas and lead to environmental degradation such as erosion, habitat fragmentation and weed propagation, in addition to granting a toehold to logging and gas-drilling companies in pristine areas.
Tom Troxel of the Intermountain Forest Association, which represents the forest-products industry, dismissed many of those fears as unfounded - many roadless areas are that way for a reason, he said, citing topography in particular - and easily allayed by allowing decisions to be made locally.
"I don't think there are bulldozers warming up at the boundaries of roadless areas. I don't expect that you're going to see widespread logging and road building," Troxel said.
The Clinton-era rule, quickly overturned when Bush took office and embroiled in lawsuits ever since, was considered one of the most far-reaching environmental initiatives in decades but was disputed by industry officials as an illegal de-facto designation of new wilderness.
Staff writers Mike Soraghan and Theo Stein contributed to this report.
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