Roadless Rules: The Struggle for the Last Wild Forests Review

Turner, in his years as the bard of the environmental movement, has perfected the technique of taking potentially dry, wonky, policy & legal information & weaving it into a larger environmental tale in a way that makes it jump off the page. Some stories just need to have the "behind the scenes" info included, and he's the man to do it.
The tale of the Roadless Rule is one of those. The concept is simple - keep public wild lands free of roads that lead to exploitation & degradation. The public gets it - and is overwhelmingly in favor of it. But the extraction industries and the GWB administration weren't keen on letting all the resources in roadless areas "go to waste." With that you enter a decade-long maze of political & legal shenanigans that would make your head spin, if you didn't have Turner for a guide. His explanation of the struggle to keep roadless areas wild reads like a thriller, with twists & turns & amazing "truth is stranger than fiction" moments.
An entertaining read, important for understanding how most environmental struggles are fought - and won - these days.
Roadless Rules: The Struggle for the Last Wild Forests Overview
Roadless Rules is a fast-paced and insightful look at one of the most important, wide-ranging, and controversial efforts to protect public forests ever undertaken in the United States.
In January 2000, President Clinton submitted to the Federal Register the Roadless Area Conservation Rule, prohibiting road construction and timber harvesting in designated roadless areas. Set to take effect sixty days after Clinton left office, the rule was immediately challenged by nine lawsuits from states, counties, off-road-vehicle users, and timber companies. The Bush administration refused to defend the rule and eventually sought to replace it with a rule that invited governors to suggest management policies for forests in their states. That rule was attacked by four states and twenty environmental groups and declared illegal.
Roadless Rules offers a fascinating overview of the creation of the Clinton roadless rule and the Bush administration’s subsequent replacement rule, the controversy generated, the response of the environmental community, and the legal battles that continue to rage more than seven years later. It explores the value of roadless areas and why the Clinton rule was so important to environmentalists, describes the stakeholder groups involved, and takes readers into courtrooms across the country to hear critical arguments.
Author Tom Turner considers the lessons learned from the controversy, arguing that the episode represents an excellent example of how the system can work when all elements of the environmental movement work togetherlocal groups and individuals determined to save favorite places, national organizations that represent local interests but also concern themselves with national policies, members of the executive branch who try to serve the public interest but need support from outside, and national organizations that use the legal system to support progress achieved through legislation or executive action.
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