JoseCuervo
New member
Maybe ol' Ten Beers will have more roads to ride his ATV, if the remaining roads fall into dissrepair, of course the damage done to Watersheds will be ignored..... Maybe it will even be good for Grizzlies, as they like the roads. And we know the Elk become Acclimated...
[ 04-07-2004, 21:39: Message edited by: ElkGunner ]
Edited to change the "M" to a "b", to help Ten Beers do his math....Forest Service roads nationwide are suffering from a $10 billion maintenance backlog, according to a national taxpayer’s watchdog group.
In its report released earlier this week, Taxpayers for Common Sense states that the U.S. Forest Service is “ignoring a growing crisis” of road disrepair, while the Bush administration is considering easing rules that restrict building more roads within National Forest boundaries.
“The federal government is paving the way to even more dangerous forest road disrepair,” said Jill Lancelot, president of Taxpayers for Common Sense. “It is crystal clear that Forest Service bureaucrats have been unwilling and unable to keep this road disrepair crisis in check. Rather than focus on fixing the current road system, they would rather build roads to cheap timber as a favor to their timber industry buddies.”
According to the report, which analyzed data from fiscal year 2002 – the most recent year for which complete date was available – Montana ranks third in the nation for the amount of backlogged maintenance.
Montana’s 32,000 miles of Forest Service roads have a backlog of $669 million, including $98 million in critical deferred maintenance; $390 million in non-critical deferred maintenance; $13 million in critical capital improvements; and $166 million in non-critical capital improvements, the report states.
California tops the TCS’s list with a backlog of $1.1 billion in deferred maintenance and capital improvements, followed by Alaska with a $900 million backlog. Rounding out the top five are Oregon, with a $664 million backlog, and Idaho, with a $660 million backlog.
Those states, plus New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Washington and Utah, make up more than $7 billion of the $10 billion backlog.
The National Forest road system includes more than 436,000 official and unofficial roads, which provide access to 192 million acres of National Forests and Grasslands.
However, many of the unofficial roads were created illegally, according to John Gatchell, conservation director with the Montana Wilderness Association, and others from the 1980s don’t lead anywhere and simply dead-end.
“These excessive roads continue to damage the watershed and wildlife habitat,” said Gatchell, who has long advocated obliterating some of the thousands of miles of illegal or poorly built roads. “They have a roads system they can’t possibly maintain. We can now work with local mills and loggers, who can operate on the forest with a much reduced road system.
“These roads are a problem and need to be dealt with, and that has to be done on a site-specific basis.”
Forest Service officials readily admit that they need to deal with the deferred maintenance and improvements. The federal agency even released a nationwide draft Environmental Assessment in 2000 that promoted building fewer roads in national forests, closing unnecessary roads and maintaining existing roads better.
The plan was to shift road management emphasis from transportation development to managing environmentally sound access.
That’s long been the goal of the Helena National Forest, which is working on two travel plans and plans to undertake two more when funding becomes available. But with limited time and money, these plans often are pushed to the backburners when forest fires or lawsuits take precedence.
That’s also too often the case for the entire Northern Region of the Forest Service, which is trying to establish these travel plans in order to set priorities.
“Certainly we’re focusing on roads – it’s important because if they’re not maintained they can create problems with the ecosystem,” said Paula Nelson, public affairs specialist for the U.S. Forest Service’s Northern Region. “We are doing travel management plans as our budgets and workloads allow us.
“But it’s no different than with any organization, or even with your home budget. You have limited money and limited hours in a day.”
[ 04-07-2004, 21:39: Message edited by: ElkGunner ]