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Roadless Areas

Challenge: 

Much of the reason sportsmen continue to experience high-quality hunting seasons year after year on public land is because of unroaded lands. Officially known as “inventoried roadless areas” by the U.S. Forest Service, these backcountry areas are defined as national forest lands that contain more than 5,000 contiguous acres without improved roads and are known by hunters and anglers to contain our best remaining fish and wildlife habitat. Roadless areas provide large blocks of exceptional habitat for big-game species such as mule deer, elk, bighorn sheep and mountain goats. These areas also offer the least degraded streams and lakes where trout, salmon and other desirable fish species – dependent on clean water, stable streamflows and consistent lake storage – can thrive.

Roadless backcountry is found in 37 states and Puerto Rico and comprises 58.5 million acres, or 2 percent, of the 2.3 billion-acre land base of the United States.

While roads are important for providing sportsmen with access to the lands they use to hunt and fish, too many roads are associated with increased big-game vulnerability and fewer mature bucks and bulls, often resulting in shorter seasons and fewer available tags. Too many roads also can decrease the quality of important spawning habitat for trout, salmon and steelhead.

Most sportsmen and state fish and wildlife agencies agree that the important fish and wildlife habitat found on our national forest backcountry is worth conserving. However, roadless area management has remained unsettled for the past 30 years, and forces are constantly at work to fragment many of the remaining backcountry lands on which sportsmen depend – leaving an uncertain future for some of America’s best public land hunting and fishing.

Strategy:

The TRCP believes that proper management of roadless areas in our national forests can provide exceptional hunting and fishing opportunities for all Americans. By working with individual sportsmen, local groups and businesses, Western governors and national decision-makers, the TRCP is ensuring that our priorities are considered as the future management of our roadless areas is determined.

The TRCP's approach to backcountry conservation is guided by the Roadless Initiative Working Group. By combining the expertise of the RIWG with an active network of sportsmen, TRCP staff can work with hunters and anglers throughout the West to conserve our outdoor traditions by supporting backcountry conservation.

If sportsmen want to sustain abundant fishing, long hunting seasons and over-the-counter tags in the West, we must remain actively involved in the future management of our roadless backcountry.


Action:

Bank on the Backcountry today!

American sportsmen have the opportunity to weigh in on ongoing national deliberations about the future of our 58.5 million acres of national forest roadless areas. The TRCP is working to influence decision-makers across the country, but we need your help to assure that our backcountry is managed in a way that sustains fish and wildlife populations and benefits sportsmen. Join the TRCP's grassroots sportsmen's campaign, Hunters and Anglers for Responsible Development, and make sure your voice is heard. 

By signing their support of Banking on the Backcountry, sportsmen's groups and businesses can express to our nation's leaders that backcountry conservation is important to our outdoor traditions, public-lands fish and wildlife habitat and economic well-being.

Colorado

The state of Colorado is in the process of developing a rule governing management of national forest roadless areas within its borders. With more elk and mule deer than any other state, few places offer more hunting opportunities than Colorado.

The TRCP Billboard in Denver Colorado.

The TRCP roadless billboard in Denver, Colo.       

In Colorado, revision of the state's roadless rule is currently underway, after a draft rule released in July 2008 generated more than 150,000 comments. Unfortunately, the draft Colorado rule is rife with exceptions that could negatively affect prime backcountry habitat.

Colorado's 4.4 million acres of roadless lands contain some of the most important habitat in the Rocky Mountain West for big game and native fish populations. Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter and the U.S. Forest Service must work with the sportsmen's community to resolve the many problems with the draft rule. By adding teeth to the Colorado roadless rule, we can uphold the values – tradition, economy, experience, trophies and habitat – that roadless areas sustain in the Centennial State. 

If you care about these resources and the future of hunting and fishing on America’s public lands, become a TRCP partner and stay tuned for opportunities to get involved. Contact Forrest Orswell, TRCP Colorado field representative, for more information on the Colorado roadless rule.

Read Backcountry Bounty: Colorado.

Idaho

Following a two-year planning process, the final Idaho roadless rule was released on Oct. 16, 2008, with the TRCP's official support. The TRCP was able to substantially influence development of the Idaho roadless rule due to active involvement with Idaho sportsmen, state and federal authorities and the Idaho planning team. With 9.3 million acres of backcountry, Idaho provides over-the-counter deer tags to visitors wishing to hunt trophy Gem State mule deer and whitetail bucks. Conservation of some of the state's best hunting and fishing grounds are assured in the final Idaho rule.

Learn more about the Idaho roadless rule at the U.S. Forest Service Web site.

Join Hunters and Anglers for Responsible Development. 

For more information about roadless areas, contact Joel Webster, associate director of campaigns, or Katie McKalip, associate director of communications.

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