150,000 acres of Six Rivers National Forest wilderness could lose protection if Trump administration rescinds roadless rule

“Roadless areas are some of the most wildfire-resilient landscapes in North America because they are the least degraded by industrial logging and road-building that would have converted fire-adapted native forests into fire-prone tree farms, and provided road access for human-caused ignitions from careless recreationists and sociopathic arsonists,” Timothy Ingalsbee, executive director of Firefighters United for Safety, Ethics, and Ecology (FUSEE), wrote in a prepared statement. “Tearing open roadless areas to industrial logging and road-building will do wildland firefighters no favors — just the opposite.”

Previous
Previous

5 years after Oregon’s Labor Day fires, scientists find surprises in streams

Next
Next

Federal agents arrest firefighters working on WA wildfire