Who Wants to Rescind the Roadless Rule?

Explore their arguments and come to your own conclusion about rescission.

Often, who is for something is all you need to know to be against that something. In this case that's certainly true. But we'll let you decide for yourself.

A self-guided learning map

Writing a comment can seem like a puzzle

The Learning Map helps you put all the pieces together. Once you've explored what's at stake, understand why conservation matters, and connected to a roadless area you can tell your own story and write a strong comment.

Why Conservation MattersRoadless Area Values
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What's at stake

Roadless Area Values

Hailed as one of America's most successful conservation measures, the Roadless Area Conservation Rule has protected drinking water, wildlife habitat, and world-class recreation across 58.5 million acres of national forests.

Rescinding the rule threatens all of that — handing control of these public lands to extractive industries.

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Why it matters

Threats to Roadless Areas

Road construction is not one threat — it is the enabling condition for most of the major threats imperiled species and ecosystems face on National Forest lands.

Inventoried Roadless Areas exist in their current ecological condition because roads were never built. Rescinding the Rule activates a cascade of harm documented by NatureServe, the IUCN, and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.

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Connect

Find your roadless area

Find a place that means something to you — by ZIP, by name, by a feature you remember, by a species you care about. Nine facets per area: wildlife, trails, history, your story.

If you haven't been to a roadless area, you may already have — you just didn't know it.

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Tell your story

Write a comment

Now you know the issues and you've connected to a place. The strongest comments come from an original perspective grounded in lived experience.

Enter the guided comment path and create a unique comment using the information pinned in your briefcase.

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Keep learning. Keep speaking up.The Roadless Rule depends on public engagement. Share what you've learned.

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