http://www.montereyherald.com/mld/montereyherald/news/15178623.htm
Legality of Forest Service road plan
questioned
By
SAMANTHA YOUNG 8/2/06 Monterey County
Herald
SAN
FRANCISCO
- A federal judge said
Tuesday that the Bush administration had
the right to overturn a ban on road
construction in untouched parts of the
national forests but questioned whether
it could do so without weighing the
possible environmental effects.
U.S. District Judge Elizabeth Laporte
said the Forest Service appeared to be
''on solid ground'' last year when it
reversed a Clinton administration rule
banning new roads on nearly a third of
federal forests.
But she questioned whether the agency
violated federal law by skipping
environmental studies -- the heart of
two lawsuits brought by 20 environmental
groups and the states of California,
Oregon, New Mexico and Washington. The
cases have since been consolidated, and
all parties presented arguments Tuesday
in Laporte's courtroom.
Laporte said she did not know when
she would make a final decision in the
case.
''The court's role is not to endorse
one approach over the other,'' Laporte
said, referring to Forest Service
management plans.
Rather, she said, the question is
whether federal procedures were violated
when Bush overturned the ban on road
building that President Clinton ordered
in January 2001, eight days before he
left office. If so, that could prompt
Laporte to invalidate a new
state-by-state management strategy
endorsed by the Bush administration and
restore the road-building ban.
The legal dispute stems from the
so-called ''roadless rule'' that
prohibited logging, mining and other
development on 58.5 million acres of
roadless forest land in 38 states and
Puerto Rico. Of that, 97 percent is in
12 states: Alaska, Arizona, California,
Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New
Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and
Wyoming.
While praised by environmental
groups, the Clinton rule was challenged
by timber companies and some western
states. After a series of legal battles
in California and Wyoming, the Bush
administration in May 2005 replaced the
roadless rule with a voluntary
state-by-state petition process.
Critics said the reversal did not
take into account environmental and
wildlife studies for some of the most
pristine forests in the U.S.
''The roadless areas are open to
development unless the states can
convince otherwise,'' California deputy
attorney general Claudia Polsky told the
court.
Environmentalists worry that timber,
mining and oil and gas interests could
penetrate deeper into forests, which
provide habitat for fish and wildlife,
as well as areas recreation.
Industry representatives say building
roads in specific areas is a legitimate
activity to help fight wildfires,
salvage timber from burned areas or thin
overgrown forests.
''Most catastrophic wildfires we're
experiencing in the West have blown up
in unroaded areas,'' said Chris West,
vice president for the Portland,
Ore.-based American Forest Resource
Council, which has sided with the Bush
administration in the case.
Forest Service spokesman Dan Jiron
said the approach put in place under the
Bush administration does not mean that
areas previously designated as
off-limits will be opened automatically
to road-building and commercial
pursuits.
''What we're doing is protecting
roadless areas by working with people
for meaningful long-term protection,''
Jiron said in a telephone interview from
Washington, D.C.
The Bush policy calls for governors
to decide by Nov. 18 whether to petition
the federal government to block new
roads in their forests. Petitions by
Virginia, South Carolina and North
Carolina have been approved, while
petitions from California and New Mexico
have been submitted. Arizona, Colorado
and Idaho are formulating their
petitions.
While a blanket environmental study
was not completed for the state petition
program, the agency intends to carry out
individual environmental reviews on a
forest-by-forest basis, Barclay Samford,
an attorney for the U.S. Department of
Justice, said in court.
He said any other approach would have
been a speculative exercise until each
state had decided how the roadless areas
should be managed.
Barclay defended the Bush
administration plan, which sought to
protect sensitive forest areas after a
federal judge in Wyoming struck down the
Clinton-era protections in 2003. In a
case brought by the state of Wyoming,
the judge ruled that the government had
overstepped its authority by creating
wilderness areas on U.S. Forest Service
land. The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals dismissed environmentalists'
appeal of that ruling, saying the new
Bush rule made the issue moot.
In the latest lawsuit, environmental
groups and the four western states have
asked Laporte to invalidate the
state-petition strategy and bring back
the Clinton ban on road building.
Meanwhile, Justice Department lawyers
argued that roadless areas should be
managed under individual forest
management plans should Laporte find the
petition process was created without the
proper environmental consultations.