Wallowa-Whitman National Forest calls for 1,261 miles of roads to be destroyed !!
Big D keepitopen on December 16, 2015
Today the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest released its analysis of the roads not needed for forest management or access to our mountains.
The report calls for the destruction of 1,261 miles of roads, which equates to 2,656 segments within the boundaries or the forest.
These are roads to access wildfires, manage overgrown vegetation, gather firewood from, and provided areas of solitude for our veterans, elderly and families.
By releasing such a report the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest has turned a deaf ear to our residents, our culture, and our ways of life to sustain our families from the mountains and continues to ignore their mission to serve the public in Eastern Oregon.
Very disappointing to see this, and to know that no one at the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest had the integrity to work with even the county commissioners on this issue.
Link to analysis report – http://www.fs.usda.gov/detail/wallowa-whitman/landmanagement/projects/?cid=fsbdev7_008909
http://forestaccessforall.org/wallowa-whitman-national-forest-calls-for-1261-miles-of-roads-to-be-destroyed/
What has happened to the 'public servants' in Oregon, Washington state and California?? Have they all gone mad with 'control' and 'kill' (murder) and 'destroy'? These common employees of corporation subsidies, following the UN Agenda 21 aka 2030 dictates, have no authority to destroy anyone or anything - period - and should be arrested and prosecuted for destruction of public property - property belonging to the PEOPLE - NOT to the UN. Money from the people built those roads. Fire fighting NEEDS those roads. Sensible forest management dictates the need for those roads. America, wake up and stand up and fight for your rights and your property.
4 comments:
Hurry up and get your groups of people to stand in the way of this destruction, and contact all of the wildlife protection groups to help stop this!!!! Contact every elective representative and demand that they stop this!
I think the Fire Department might have something to say about this... No roads means they cannot get in to put out Forrest fires.
national Forest Service contracts fire fighting to aircraft companies(helicopters and planes) for fire fighting, so the roads are not an issue for that. The forest service has been slowly closing roads in the national forests for years, so this is nothing new.
I trained on a Volunteer FD to go into the woods to fight Forrest fires. Hauling bulldozers, skidders, and many other types of equipment into the back woods via truck on those roads and trails. Sometimes it would take the NFS hours to show up. Most of the time we would already have the fires out before they got there.
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