The Daily World on MSN
Ending the ‘roadless rule’ could affect wildfires, wildlife in Oregon, Washington federal forests
People have until Friday to weigh in on a proposal that could allow new roads and logging in wild areas. Read Story ...
A federal rule that has safeguarded some of Oregon's last undeveloped forests since 2001 could soon be repealed.U.S.
The U.S. Forest Service could close its Pacific Northwest headquarters in Portland, which oversees Oregon and Washington ...
The Trump administration rescinded a longstanding rule meant to safeguard intact forests across the West on June 23 in a move that could open 2 million acres of Oregon forests to logging and ...
The public comment period for rescinding the "roadless rule" ends this week. Federal forest land along the Oregon-California ...
Millions of acres across Oregon called “roadless areas” could soon lose protections. Trump Administration leaders say they ...
The Roadless Rule is a U.S. Forest Service regulation that protects inventoried roadless areas from certain timber activities and construction within the national forest system, according to the U.S.
Mark McLaughlin, conservation director for the North Coast Land Conservancy, left, and Morgan deMoll, NCLC’s conservation manager, speak about facilitating a land transaction for the Neskowin Regional ...
President Donald Trump has instructed federal agencies to increase logging on national forests nationwide, including in Washington state, counter to decades of environmental policy and protections. A ...
Earlier this month, Ian Isaacson backpacked into the heart of Oregon’s Wallowa Mountains, compound bow in hand, on the lookout for elk. “I’m a generalist,” Isaacson said a few days before his trip.
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