{"id":26892,"date":"2018-01-26T21:03:00","date_gmt":"2018-01-27T05:03:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/scientists-urge-congress-to-back-off-roadless-rule\/"},"modified":"2018-01-26T21:03:00","modified_gmt":"2018-01-27T05:03:00","slug":"scientists-urge-congress-to-back-off-roadless-rule","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/scientists-urge-congress-to-back-off-roadless-rule\/","title":{"rendered":"Scientists urge Congress to back off roadless rule"},"content":{"rendered":"
A group of 220 natural resource scientists urged Congress with a joint letter<\/a> Friday not to eliminate the so-called “roadless rule” on Alaska’s Tongass and Chugach national forests.<\/p>\n The letter comes in response to two proposed changes U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, attached to an Interior Department spending bill<\/a> in November that hasn’t yet passed. One provision exempts the Tongass and Chugach from prohibitions on road construction and timber harvesting in certain areas of the national forests.<\/p>\n Another section overturns protections in the Forest Service’s Tongass Management Plan for valuable old-growth timber. The plan instead charts a path toward logging younger tree stands.<\/p>\n Overturning these protections, the scientists write, would threaten salmon runs and the Tongass’ ability to store carbon and mitigate climate change.<\/p>\n “Retaining the existing roadless areas of the Tongass is a ‘key element’ in sustaining the region’s extraordinary salmon runs (and their commercial, subsistence, and recreational fisheries),’” the scientists wrote. “The Tongass also represents North America’s largest carbon sink, some of the richest, most biologically productive forest on Earth, and twenty‐nine percent of the world’s unlogged coastal temperate rainforest.”<\/p>\n The letter is signed by four University of Alaska Fairbanks scientists: Drs. Winston P. Smith, Mary Edwards, Ginny Eckert and W. Scott Armbruster. None could be immediately reached for comment on this story.<\/p>\n The Roadless Area Conservation Rule establishes prohibitions on “road construction, road reconstruction, and timber harvesting in inventoried roadless areas on National Forest System lands,” according to the federal register.<\/p>\n