relgulation that did not allow new roads in previously inaccessible
areras. With these regulations new logging roads can be put in almost
anywhere.
larry
On Wed, 14 Jul 2004 08:00:07 -0700, Ian Skinner
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "The plan announced Monday would allow logging by permitting roads to be constructed in national forests. Governors would have to petition the federal government to block road building."
>
> You just have to love such broad misleading statements. There are lots of roads in our national forests. Now, if you read the rest of the article you do finally get a correct statement that they are discussing the current "58.5 million acres designated as roadless among the 191 million acres of national forest." As a little math tells us that leaves 132.5 million acres that are already accessible by road.
>
> So, without finding out more about what we are really talking about I'm not sure what side I am on with this. Are we talking about current "Wilderness" areas, or something different or more broad?
>
> --------------
> Ian Skinner
> Web Programmer
> BloodSource
> www.BloodSource.org
> Sacramento, CA
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