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Remember when Bush wasn't afraid to make unpopular decisions?

Oak

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Dec 23, 2000
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Colorado
I suppose the fact that 95% of the original public comments supported the Roadless Initiative might have something to do with this political decision. :rolleyes:

Bush delays decision on roadless areas
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration said Wednesday that it would put off until after the election a final decision on whether to allow road building and logging on 58 million acres of national forest where both are now prohibited.

Public comments on the proposed rule change, announced in July, will now be accepted through Nov. 15, instead of an earlier deadline set for next week.

Agriculture Undersecretary Mark Rey, who directs U.S. forest policy, called the delay a "fairly straightforward" response to requests from a variety of groups for more time. "It's unrelated to the elections," Rey said.

But environmentalists said the administration appeared to be rethinking the plan - at least temporarily - in the face of widespread opposition.

"I think the administration recognizes the folly of opening up 58 million acres of protected forests during an electoral campaign," said Jay Ward, political director of the Oregon Natural Resources Council, an environmental group.

The administration said in July that it was reversing the Roadless Area Conservation Rule, a 2001 executive order by President Clinton that prohibits road construction on nearly a third of federal forestland. No roads has meant no logging, mining or oil and gas development.

The new policy calls for governors to decide by 2006 whether to petition the federal government to permit new roads in their forests or keep them untouched.

The bulk of the land is in the West, including 4.4 million acres in Colorado, 2 million acres each in Oregon and Washington state, and 1.6 million acres in New Mexico.

All are considered battleground states in the presidential election.

**LINK**
 
Anybody have a guess which way the Flip-flopping Dubya is going to go with this issue?

Is he going to uphold the Roadless Rule on Nov 15, but not wanting to piss off his Extraction Industry buddies before they completely line his pockets?

or

Is he going to resume overturning this Rule, to further ruin hunting, but waiting until after the election to formally end hunting in much of the West?

Whatever happened to the "steady, determined" leadership of Dubya??? :rolleyes:
 
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