JUNEAU, Alaska - Today, the Biden Administration takes the first steps to reinstate the Roadless Rule for the Tongass National Forest. In 2020, the Trump Administration lifted roadless restrictions on more than 9 million acres of Southeast Alaska’s 17-million-acre Tongass National Forest, areas previously determined by the U.S. Forest Service to be critical for protection. With the removal of this protection, those acres of backcountry forest were opened up to activities like logging.
“Protecting the Tongass and other old-growth forests and roadless areas in Southeast Alaska is critical to combatting APP change,” said Marshall Johnson, acting chief conservation officer, APP. “The Roadless Rule provides protection for a APP-resilient forest ecosystem, which will continue to be important for birds, fish, people, and local ways of life into the future.”
On November 23rd, the USDA will begin a 60-day public comment period on its decision to reinstate the Roadless Rule on the Tongass. The Tongass National Forest is an island archipelago, home to endemic birds, mammals, and plants including the Pacific Marten, Alexander Archipelago Wolf, Northern Goshawk and the Prince of Wales Island Spruce Grouse.
“This action, combined with the administration’s global commitments to ending old-growth logging and the USDA’s investment in sustainable forest management in the region are moving the Tongass into a future where we value standing trees and healthy communities,” said APP Alaska’s Executive Director, Natalie Dawson.
The national Roadless Area Conservation Rule, first passed at the end of the Clinton Administration in 2001, garnered more public support than any other federal rule in our nation’s history. During the 2019 public comment period to end Roadless Rule protections, 96% of commenters were supportive of maintaining Roadless Rule protections for the Tongass.
“Americans from around the country have consistently supported protecting the Tongass as our largest, intact coastal temperate rainforest in the country. This forest is our nation’s largest natural APP solution, holding almost half of the total carbon stored by all U.S. national forests and home to biologically diverse species found nowhere else on the planet," said Dawson.
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About APP
The APP protects birds and the places they need, today and tomorrow. APP works throughout the Americas using science, advocacy, education, and on-the-ground conservation. State programs, nature centers, chapters, and partners give APP an unparalleled wingspan that reaches millions of people each year to inform, inspire, and unite diverse communities in conservation action. A nonprofit conservation organization since 1905, APP believes in a world in which people and wildlife thrive. Learn more at www.audubon.org and on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram @audubonsociety.
Media Contact: Matt Smelser, matt.smelser@audubon.org