PRESIDENT CLINTON'S
MEMORANDUM ON ROADLESS AREAS
____________________________________________________
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_____________________________________________________
For Immediate Release
October 13, 1999
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE
SUBJECT: Protection of Forest
"Roadless" Areas
At the start of this century, President Theodore
Roosevelt dedicated this Nation to the
conservation of natural resources -- our land,
our water, our wildlife, and all the other
precious gifts nature had bestowed upon us.
One of America's great central tasks, he
declared, is "leaving this land even a
better land for our descendants than it is for
us."
In pursuit of that goal, President Roosevelt
established new protections for millions upon
millions of acres across America. His
remarkable legacy includes 5 national parks, 18
national monuments, and dozens of wildlife
refuges. Among his most notable
conservation achievements were the consolidation
of 65 million acres of Federal forest reserves
into the National Forest System, and the creation
of the United States Forest Service to ensure
wise stewardship of these lands for future
generations. In this effort, he was guided
by Gifford Pinchot, the first Chief of the Forest
Service and a founder of America's conservation
movement.
Today, the National Forest System has grown to
192 million acres of forests and grasslands in 46
States and territories. These lands provide
a broad array of benefits to the American
people. They support rural industries,
sustain fish and wild-life, generate drinking
water for 60 million Americans, and provide
important recreation opportunities to an
increasingly urban population.
Over the years, unfortunately, our Nation has not
always honored President Roosevelt's
vision. Too often, we have favored resource
extraction over conservation, degrading our
forests and the critical natural values they
sustain. As the consequences of these
actions have become more apparent, the American
people have expressed growing concern and have
called on us to restore balance to their forests.
My Administration has made significant strides in
improving the management of our Federal
forestlands. Beginning with the adoption of
a comprehensive, science-based forest plan for
the Pacific Northwest, we have sought to
strengthen protections for wildlife, water
quality, and other vital ecological values, while
ensuring a steady, sustainable supply of timber
and other commodities to support stable rural
economies. The new forest planning
regulation proposed last month represents another
major step in that direction.
It is time now, I believe, to address our next
challenge -- the fate of those lands within the
National Forest System that remain largely
untouched by human intervention. A
principal defining characteristic of these lands
is that they do not have, and in most cases never
have had, roads across them. We know from
earlier inventories that there are more than 40
million acres of "roadless" area within
the National Forest System, generally in parcels
of 5,000 acres or more. A temporary
moratorium on road building in most of these
areas has allowed us time to assess their
ecological, economic, and social values and to
evaluate long-term options for their management.
In weighing the future of these lands, we are
presented with a unique historic
opportunity. From the Appalachian Mountains
to the Sierra Nevada, these are some of the last,
best unpro-tected wildlands in America.
They are vital havens for wildlife -- indeed,
some are absolutely critical to the survival of
endangered species. They are a source of clean,
fresh water for countless communities. They
offer unparalleled opportunities for hikers,
campers, hunters, anglers, and others to
experience unspoiled nature. In short,
these lands bestow upon us unique and
irreplaceable benefits. They are a
treasured inheritance - enduring remnants of an
untrammeled wilderness that once stretched from
ocean to ocean.
Accordingly, I have determined that it is in the
best interest of our Nation, and of future
generations, to provide strong and lasting
protection for these forests, and I am directing
you to initiate administrative proceedings to
that end.
Specifically, I direct the Forest Service to
develop, and propose for public comment,
regulations to provide appropriate long-term
protection for most or all of these currently
inventoried "roadless" areas, and to
determine whether such protection is warranted
for any smaller "roadless" areas not
yet inventoried. The public, and all
interested parties, should have the opportunity
to review and comment on the proposed
regulations. In the final regulations, the
nature and degree of protections afforded should
reflect the best available science and a careful
consideration of the full range of ecological,
economic, and social values inherent in these
lands.
I commend you, along with the Undersecretary for
Natural Resources and the Environment, Jim Lyons,
the Chief of the Forest Service, Michael Dombeck,
and the entire Forest Service for your leadership
in strengthening and modernizing the management
of our Federal forests -- lands held by us in
trust for all Americans and for future
generations. With the new effort we launch
today, we can feel confident that we have helped
to fulfill and extend the conservation legacy of
Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot, and to
ensure that the 21st century is indeed a new
century for America's forests.
WILLIAM J. CLINTON
The 60 day public comment period began when
the Notice of Intent for an Environmental Impact
Statement was published in the Oct.
19, 1999 Federal Register.
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