Roads

Legacy Roads Funding — Complete List by Project

July 10, 2008
Legacy Roads and Trails Remediation Funding: Approved Projects (listed regionally)

Legacy Roads Funding FY08 Region Totals

July 10, 2008
Legacy Roads and Trails Remediation Funding: Approved Projects (listed regionally)

Wildlife Photos on Removed Road in Clearwater National Forest

July 3, 2008
These photos, just harvested from our field cameras in the Clearwater National Forest, show bears, a bobcat and a fisher crossing a roads that have been restored. The cameras are part of an ongoing comparative study organized by Wildlands CPR to investigate the impacts of road removal on wildlife. Below is a picture of a bobcat crossing a removed road at night.  

KOMO News Report Road Problems

July 3, 2008

Abandoned, deteriorated, and neglected Forest Service roads in
Washington are damage watersheds and salmon habitat. See this excellent
KOMO 4 news report for elaboration.

Wildlands CPR Scientist to Present Update on Study of Road Removal Effects on Wildlife

July 2, 2008
Wildlands CPR Scientist Adam Switalski will present a poster session at the upcoming Society for Conservation Biology conference. Adam's session will cover the ongoing progress on a study of the effects of road removal on wildlife.

Preliminary study: Removing roads improves wildlife habitat

May 22, 2008
Since 1996, a Nez Perce and Clearwater National Forest partnership has removed more than 600 miles of decommissioned logging roads, using heavy equipment and hand tools. They have recontoured hillsides, restored streambanks, removed culverts and replanted native vegetation in an effort to help the salmon that are a key part of the tribe's culture. Many studies have been conducted on logging roads' negative impacts, but no long-term scientific studies have been completed on what happens when they are removed. Wildlands CPR has begun a pilot project study to begin to answer that question.

Imaginary Highways Defeated!

May 22, 2008
Revised Statute 2477 has been a convoluted, dangerous and entertaining part of Western public lands debates for many years. Some state and county governments use this obscure part of the 1866 Mining Law to prevent the protection of public lands, claiming that RS 2477 grants highway rights-of-way over most of the West’s backcountry. 
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