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National Forests

What's New

Protecting Roadless Areas 

The U.S. Forest Service is deciding whether to open 6 million acres of the largest pristine forest in the lower 48 states - to logging, mining and drilling.  This is another reminder of the days of the Bush administration,which also removed protections for the Tongass national forest. 

These alarming policies threaten the George Washington National Forest protecting our Blue Ridge Mountains.  Once nearly denuded of all trees, Virginia's one-million-acre national forest is home to thousands of plant and animal species and memorializes pre-colonial heritage.  With six wilderness areas within the forest, we do not need special interests to move in and take our heritage.

Brief Summary

Our national forests protect clean water, preserve undisturbed wildlife habitat, and provide backcountry recreational opportunities for thousands of Virginians. Unfortunately, only a fraction of these forests remains undisturbed by extractive industries: 16,000 miles of roads already traverse their acreage. 

In 2001, Environment Virginia and our allies won a remarkable victory with the enactment of the Roadless Area Conservation Rule, which placed 56 million acres of pristine forest land off-limits to road-building, mining, and virtually all logging. 

Unfortunately, the Bush administration stripped away this vital protection in an effort to give away these pristine forests to the timber industry and other powerful special interests.  

Fortunately, a recent federal court decision by Judge Elizabeth LaPorte blocked the Bush administration's efforts by reinstating the protections established by the 2001 Roadless Rule. The decision was a huge victory in the fight to preserve America’s natural heritage.

Even though our forests are currently enjoying the protection of the 2001 Roadless Rule, the Forest Service announced that it would still be open to reviewing petitions on a state-by-state basis.  We need to codify this rule into law and take Virginia's last wild forests off the chopping block once and for all.

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We're working to ensure that roadless areas in national forests remain off limits to logging, mining and drilling.