US court ends Bush-era road-building in forests

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The Bush administration acted  illegally when it opened millions of acres (hectares) of U.S.  national forests to road-building and logging, a federal  appeals court ruled yesterday.

The U.S. Appeals Court for the Ninth Circuit effectively  reinstated a 2001 rule that bars development in recognized  “roadless” areas of national forests, except in Idaho and the  Tongass National Forest in Alaska.

“The court today confirmed protections for these wild  forests and rivers that Americans love and cherish,” said  Kristen Boyles, a lawyer with Earthjustice, who litigated the  case on behalf of 20 environmental groups.

“These are areas where we get our clean water, where we  hike and hunt, take our families camping,” Boyles said by  telephone from Seattle. “We can all cheer that the court today  protected national roadless areas.”

The original 2001 rule was struck down in 2005 by the Bush  administration, which offered an alternative that allowed  states to petition to build roads and do logging on national  forest land. Legal challenges to this change kept all but a  tiny handful of projects from being built.