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In June, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins announced the Trump administration was rescinding the 2001 Roadless ...
While there is some hope that the rescinding of a 2001 roadless rule could lead to better wildfire mitigation, others worry ...
The Trump administration plans to rescind the "roadless rule" that impedes logging on 59 million acres of national forests, ...
The Trump administration rescinded a rule meant to safeguard forests across the West in a move that could open 2 million ...
If fully enacted, Rollins’ decision to rescind the Roadless Rule will open a whopping 58.5 million acres of currently protected National Forest lands to road construction, logging, and other ...
The U.S. Department of Food and Agriculture recently announced it would try to roll back the “roadless rule,” a decades-old ...
The U.S. Department of Food and Agriculture recently announced it would try to roll back the “roadless rule,” a decades-old ...
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins announced during a meeting of the Western Governors’ Association in New Mexico, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is rescinding the 2001 Roadles ...
The land at stake ranges from the far north's dense coastal forests to Southern California’s great expanses of brush. Experts ...
The "roadless rule" has prohibited road construction and timber harvesting on over 58 million acres of public land since 2001 ...
The Trump Administration is proposing rolling back national forest protections by rescinding the 2001 Roadless Rule.
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said the Trump administration would rescind the "roadless rule" in national forests, calling it "common sense" land management. The rule was put in place ...
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