WASHINGTON, DC - April 10 - Today the Bush administration released its latest forest
planning regulations, which are as flawed as the ones overturned by a federal
court last year. The Forest Service’s new planning rules contain almost all of
the same problems as the agency’s 2005 regulations that were struck down less
than a year ago in a legal victory for conservation organizations. Both the 2005
regulatory changes and these latest changes seek to turn the strict
forest-planning standards established in 1982 by the Reagan administration into
virtually meaningless suggestions, making it easier for industry to log, mine,
and drill national forests with little to no regard for impacts on wildlife and
the land.
“America’s national forests are the source of much of the
country’s water supplies, wildlife and wide open spaces, and they should be
managed for the overall public interest. That requires a balance between
conserving and utilizing resources, not the single-minded pursuit of economic
profit,” said Rodger Schlickeisen, president of Defenders of Wildlife. “Today
the Bush administration has unwisely come down on the side of industry by
trotting out yet another version of national forest regulations written
specifically for logging, mining and oil and gas
industries.”
The Bush administration’s 2005 forest planning
rules were challenged in court by Defenders of Wildlife and other conservation
groups. In March 2007, a federal district court judge in
San
Francisco
ruled that the Forest Service
had failed to consider the environmental impacts of the far-reaching regulatory
changes proposed in those regulations, neglected to offer the public an
opportunity to comment on the changes, and did not adequately consider the
impacts the changes would have on endangered species. As a result of this
ruling, the administration was required to complete an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) and to consult with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on how
the new regulations would impact wildlife and overall environmental
integrity.
The Bush
administration’s latest proposed regulations continue to violate key
environmental laws, forcing Defenders of Wildlife and other conservation
organizations to consider going back to court to challenge the latest changes.
Although the Forest Service went through the motions of analyzing the
environmental impacts of the new rules in an EIS, it continues to assert that
forest plans have no effect upon the environment, and its environmental review
therefore fails to properly analyze the impacts of the new rules on wildlife and
other environmental factors. In addition, the new regulations fly in the face of
a federal forest management law that requires the national forests to be managed
under binding standards to limit timber harvesting and
other extractive uses and to ensure the protection of other resources, including
wildlife and native plants, water quality and recreation.
“The Bush administration is trying to reverse
decades of progress in managing national forests without considering the impacts
on wildlife and the environment,” said Schlickeisen. “This rule turns back the
clock to a time when the country thought natural resources were limitless and
conservation was barely an afterthought. We live in a very different world
today—a much more enlightened world in which the American people understand the
importance of protecting our dwindling resources to maintain our economy and way
of life, for ourselves and future generations. Once again, however, the Bush
administration is choosing to ignore the opinions of the American people, opting
instead to bend the rules for the timber industry and oil
companies.”
Learn more about Defenders' work to protect America's national forests.
Defenders of Wildlife
is dedicated to the protection of all native animals and plants in their natural
communities. With more than 1
million members and activists, Defenders of Wildlife is a leading advocate
for innovative solutions to safeguard our wildlife heritage for generations to
come. For more information, visit
www.defenders.org.
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