Draft EIS, Roadless Area Conservation
in
Idaho's Roadless WILDLIFE HABITAT endangered- Roadless Area Conservation
Draft Environmental Impact Statement The Bush Administration is employing a
new back-door plan to subvert the present policy of protecting Roadless
Wildlife Habitat Areas towards a policy of extracting the timber and minerals
from these critical areas. The state has petitioned (PETITION OF GOVERNOR
JAMES E. RISCH FOR ROADLESS AREA MANAGEMENT IN IDAHO, OCTOBER 5, 2006) the
federal government through a law previously not used in the fight to log and
mine our precious Roadless Wildlife Habitat (5 U.S.C. 553 of the
Administrative Procedures Act, 1.28 of title 7). The use of this
Administrative Procedures Act, if successful, will set dangerous precedents
for the rest of the nation’s Roadless Wildlife Habitat Areas. This petition
has allowed the U.S. Forest Service to initiate an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS), called the Roadless Area Conservation EIS, which will,
inevitably, lead to a decision to log and mine the majority of the remaining
Roadless Wildlife Habitat Areas in Idaho. Order a free copy of the Roadless
Area Conservation Final EIS, specify that they send you a full set of the
documents, and request it either in print or cd disk. rschneider@fs.fed.us or
The final EIS (over 2,000 pages, including appendices) may be found on the
internet at http://roadless.fs.fed.us/ The Roadless Area Conservation DEIS
divides the remaining Roadless Wildlife Habitat into four new categories or
“Management Themes”; (1) Wild Land Recreation, (2) Primitive, (3) Back
Country /Restoration, and (4) General Forest, Rangeland, and Grassland. Not
surprisingly, the Administration’s plan would impact over two/thirds of the
remaining 9.3 million acres of pristine Roadless Wildlife Habitat Areas in
Idaho, severely reducing its value for wildlife. The General Forest,
Rangeland, and Grassland “Management Theme” would be heavily impacted
with roads, logging, and mining. This "Management Theme" will be the most
destructive element of this DEIS. Most of the 609,500 acres of this category
will be given to the phosphate mining industry from wild-lands in Southern
Idaho. One of the nicest descriptions of this trade off is, World-class
Premier Wildlife Habitat exchanged for Superfund Cleanup Sites. The
"Management Theme", Back Country Restoration, despite its rhetoric, will
allow road construction, logging, and other development on 5.2 million acres.
The effects of this "Management Theme" will fall somewhere between Superfund
Cleanup site and its present pristine state of undeveloped wildlife habitat.
The Primitive "Management Theme" will open the door to some logging and road
building on 1.6 million acres. These areas will, then, will fall short of the
Forest Service's recommended wilderness suitability criteria. The Wild Land
Recreation “Management Theme” (for 1.4 million acres) will be altered
only slightly. Timber harvest would be permitted in these areas under certain
exceptions. These areas will show only little evidence of human use. This
category would, somewhat, retain protections similar to the same protection
as Roadless Wildlife Habitat enjoys now and similar protection that all
Roadless Wildlife Habitat will continue to enjoy in other states. One of the
many impacts of this Roadless Area Conservation EIS will be to open the door
to the destruction of our Roadless Wildlife Habitat heritage. The door will
be opened to further development within Idaho and will set precedents for
other regions to follow. Presently, these areas are protected from
destructive development. This Roadless Area Conservation EIS will change
those protections. From the existing status of protected wildlife habitat
areas, the door will be opened to develop many of these areas. A better
alternative, and one not even considered by this DEIS, is the permanent
protection of these important wild life habitat areas. The House of
Representatives is presently considering H.R. 1975, the Northern Rockies
Ecosystem Protection Act. This bill gives permanent protection to all
remaining pristine roadless areas larger than 5000 acres within the northern
Rockies ecosystem, and provides for the rehabilitation of Roadless Wildlife
Habitat Areas that have already been impacted by the resource extractive
industries. FOC members and associates commented aggressively on the negative
effects of this DEIS. For more information on this important issue, see the
links below. Forest Service website for the Idaho Roadless Rule [1]
Governor's web site [2] Heritage Forests website for Idaho Roadless Rule [3]
Read Friends of the Clearwater's scoping comments [4] Idaho’s wild
backcountry is a natural treasure for all Americans. Idahoans have a strong
affinity for the rugged, beautiful backcountry and essentially want it
unchanged. Friends of the Clearwater advocates maintaining the status quo,
protection. The proposed rule is a roll back of protections on places
Idahoans — and Americans — hold dear. Idaho’s backcountry is special to
Idaho and all America, just as it is. These areas belong to all of us.
Idahoans love their backcountry and don’t want it to change. We cannot
allow the federal government and developers to open the door to spoiling
Idaho’s special places. In these times of rapid change, we need to think
ahead to guard those quiet, special places where we escape the noise and
crowds of everyday life. Let’s keep existing protections in place or
provide permanent protection to keep Idaho’s backcountry areas as they are.
• “Keep our backcountry like it is.” • “Don’t open the door to
developers.” • “Idahoans and Americans love their backcountry as it is.
• We are working to support the legal status quo — not pushing for new
rules. This plan is taking existing protection away from our special areas.
• Common sense is on our side. There is very little reason to develop these
places — or they would have been developed long ago. • Idahoans and
Americans love their national forests as they are. Particularly in fast
growing communities like Lewiston and Moscow, and Coeur d’Alene. Idahoans
are concerned about the rapid rate of change which is changing the face of
Idaho — for the worse. These are not Roadless Areas- These are rare
pristine natural habitat areas which are accessed by trails, within the
National Forests. These special areas are what make Idaho great. “Folks in
Idaho want their special areas protected too. Their hunting, fishing and
outdoor heritage is just as valuable as everywhere else. The federal
government should not hand Idaho’s special places over to special
interests. We can do better.” • Phosphate mining. “Idahoans do not want
to see their favorite areas handed over to mining companies and turned into
Superfund sites. We have seen that much too often in Idaho. Idahoans — and
Americans — do not want to see protections for these special places rolled
back.” • This plan provides loopholes, especially in the Management
Theme, Back Country/ Restoration. “Existing rules already allow flexibility
for managing specific problems as they come up; we don’t need to open the
door to new development by rolling back existing protections for Idaho’s
backcountry.” • We respect the people who live in rural communities and
their fear of wildfire: “We all agree that the safety of homes and
communities is of paramount importance. But the roadless rule is not about
homes and communities; it’s about the backcountry. We need to prioritize
projects that protect human safety, not open the backcountry to special
interests.”
[1] http://www.roadless.fs.fed.us/idaho.shtml
[2] http://gov.idaho.gov/roadless_petition.html
[3] http://www.ourforests.org/IDPetition/
[4] http://www.friendsoftheclearwater.org//www.friendsoftheclearwater.org/node/472
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