


THE
ROADLESS AREAS CONSERVATION RULE TIMELINE
October
13: President
Clinton announces the Roadless Initiative.
October 19: Roadless
Initiative Notice of Intent to prepare an EIS is published
in the Federal Register.
November 2: Forest
Service Chief Mike Dombeck testifies before the Senate
on the Roadless Initiative.
November 3: Forest Service Chief Mike Dombeck
testifies in favor of the Roadless Initiative before
the House on the Roadless Initiative.
December 20: Over 350,000 comments submitted
on scoping period for Roadless Initiative.
January National public survey released by
republican pollster Linda DiVall reveals that 76 percent
of Americans support the Clinton policy to permanently
protect roadless areas from development, including
62 percent of republicans.
January 12: Theodore Roosevelt Conservation
Alliance found that of 50 million hunters and anglers
polled, 86 percent of anglers and 83 percent of hunter
supported efforts to keep the remaining roadless areas
in National Forests free of roads.
February 14: Led
by Senator Barbara Boxer, twenty U.S. Senators send
letter to President Clinton asking for full protection
of roadless areas.
February 22: USDA
Under Secretary Jim Lyons testifies before the Senate
on the Roadless Initiative.
March 14: USDA
Under Secretary Jim Lyons testifies before the House
on the Roadless Initiative.
March 30: George
Frampton, head of the Council on Environmental Quality
testifies before the Senate on the Roadless Initiative.
May 9: Draft
EIS and Proposed Rule released.
May 10: Federal
Register Notice on Proposed Rule.
July Over 2000 leaders and members of the faith
community write to President Clinton to express concern
that the Forest Service's proposal does not does not
"fulfill our responsibility to respect God's
creation in these increasingly rare wild forests."
July 11: House
Small Business Committee hearing on the Roadless Initiative.
July 12: Senator Larry Craig backed off his
plan to offer an amendment that would have delayed
President Clinton's plan to ban road-building in 43
million acres of roadless federal forests.
July 17: Over 1.1 million comments submitted
on draft environmental review of Roadless Rule.
July 26: Deputy
Chief of the National Forest System, Jim Furnish testifies
before the Senate.
November 13: Final
Environmental Impact Statement released.
January 5: President
Clinton signs Roadless Rule into law.
January 8: Boise
Cascade et al. files suit in Idaho U.S. district court.
Case is assigned to Judge Edward Lodge.
January 20: President Bush takes office. White
House directive postpones effective date of all federal
rules not yet in effect, including Roadless Rule.
February 5: USDA
Secretary Veneman postpones effective date of Roadless
Rule until May 12, citing White House directive.
February 20: Boise
Cascade files motion for a preliminary injunction
(PI), requesting decision on their case prior to May
12.
March 15: Senators
Patrick Leahy and Maria Cantwell write to Attorney
General John Ashcroft urging vigorous defense of Roadless
Rule litigation.
March 30: At court hearing on Idaho PI motions,
the Bush Administration does not defend the Roadless
Rule and asks the court to wait for the Administration
to complete its review and file a status report by
May 4.
April 20: Timber industry coalition, led by
American Forest and Paper Association, files lawsuit
in District of Columbia U.S. district court.
May 4: Secretary
of Agriculture Ann Veneman promises to allow the roadless
rule to go into effect on May 12, 2001.
May 10: Judge
Lodge issues preliminary injunction blocking implementation
of Roadless Rule; environmental intervenors appeal
to Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
June 7: Forest
Service requires approval by Chief of all road building
and logging projects in roadless areas until forest
plans are amended.
September 10: More
than 675,000 comments submitted in support of the
roadless rule for a total of over 2.2 million since
1999.
September 20: Forest Service proposes changes
in its "categorical exclusion" regulations
that would exempt small-scale management activities
in roadless areas from environmental review.
October 15: Ninth Circuit holds hearing on
expedited appeals of Judge Lodge's preliminary injunction.
December 20: Forest
Service issues interim directive on roadless area
management, removing protection for contiguous
unroaded areas.
May 9: 26
Senators send a letter to President Bush asking him
to uphold the Roadless Rule.
May 17: Bush Administration recommends no wilderness
protection for roadless areas in Tongass National
Forest.
June 5: U.S
Representatives Jay Inslee (D- WA) & Sherwood
Boehlert, (R-NY) introduce a bill (H.R. 4865) codifying
the Roadless Rule with more than 175 original cosponsors.
June 26: Forest
Service releases report discounting many public comments
submitted on the Roadless Rule.
July 25: U.S.
Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and John Warner (R-VA)
introduce a bill (S. 2790) codifying the Roadless
Rule.
December 6: The Bush Administration proposes
revised national forest planning regulations that
weaken environmental review and public participation.
December 11: President
Bush announces his so-called "Healthy Forest
Initiative".
December 12: 9th
Circuit Court of Appeals lifts the injunction on the
Roadless Area Conservation Rule - effectively making
it the law of the land.
December 23: State of Idaho, Boise Cascade
et al file with the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals asking
for the roadless case to be reheard by a larger panel
of 9th Circuit judges.
February 13: Mark
Rey testifies that the Bush Administration will
issue a "modified" roadless rule within
the next two months.
April 7: The
9th Circuit Court of Appeals denies State of Idaho's
and Boise Cascade Corporation's petitions for
rehearing and for en banc consideration of the Roadless
Area Conservation Rule case confirming that the rule
is legally sound. By refusing to rehear the case,
the entire 9th Circuit has upheld its December 12th
decision that the lower court's injunction against
the roadless rule was an abuse of discretion.
June 9: The Bush administration announces it
decision to exempt Alaska's National Forests from
the roadless rule as part of a court settlement with
the State of Alaska and the timber industry. This
decision effects the Tongass National Forest America's
largest national forest and last coastal rainforest.
The administration also announced its intentions to
allow governors to opt out of the roadless rule.
July 15: The Forest Service opens 60-day comment
period on proposing to amend regulations concerning
the Roadless Area Conservation Rule in Alaska's Tongass
and Chugach National Forests.
· Forest
Service advance notice of proposed rulemaking for
Tongass/Chugach National Forests
· Forest
Service notice of proposed rulemaking for Tongass
National Forest
September 2: Roadless rule comment period ends
with nearly 300,000 comments received.
September 15: The Bush administration elects
not to appeal a court ruling striking down the Clinton-era
roadless rule prohibiting the construction of roadways
across 58.5 million acres of national forest.
December 23: The Bush administration placed
a temporary exemption on Alaska's Tongass national
forest from the Roadless Area Conservation Rule today,
despite receiving nearly 250,000 public comments opposing
the plan.
January
12: Marks the three-year anniversary of the Roadless
Area Conservation Rule finalization. On January
20, 2001, the Bush Administration took office
and froze implementation of the rule.
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