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The Trump Administration is proposing rolling back national forest protections by rescinding the 2001 Roadless Rule.
Brooke Rollins, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture with the Trump administration, rescinded the Roadless Rule. The Roadless Rule was established during the Clinton Administration to protect nearly 59 milli ...
The U.S. Department of Food and Agriculture recently announced it would try to roll back the “roadless rule,” a decades-old ...
Brooke Rollins, US Secretary of Agriculture with the Trump administration, is rescinding the “Roadless Rule.” The Roadless ...
Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins last week laid out her case for why the federal Roadless Rule that protects some 58 million acres of Forest Service land should be rescinded.
The U.S. Department of Food and Agriculture recently announced it would try to roll back the “roadless rule,” a decades-old ...
In June, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins announced the Trump administration was rescinding the 2001 Roadless ...
The "roadless rule" has prohibited road construction and timber harvesting on over 58 million acres of public land since 2001 ...
Known for its salmon, Dolly Varden, steelhead, and rainbow trout, Alaska's Tongass National Forest has approximately 9.7 ...
The Trump administration rescinded a rule meant to safeguard forests across the West in a move that could open 2 million acres in Oregon to logging.
Revoking “Roadless Rule” protection from 58 million acres of U.S. Forest Service land could leave the agency wandering without a map, according to forest policy observers. The proposal announced ...
While there is some hope that the rescinding of a 2001 roadless rule could lead to better wildfire mitigation, others worry ...
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