We have until [XXXX] To SAVE
AMERICA’S ROADLESS FORESTS.
99% of Americans want to keep the Roadless Rule.
Thanks to you and people like you, over 625,000 people weighed in during the comment period that ended on Sept 19, 2025 asking Americans if they want to keep the Roadless Rule, which protects almost 58 million acres of backcountry forestland across 38 states and Puerto Rico. 99% of public comments submitted were in favor of protecting wild roadless forests by keeping the Roadless Rule around.
What’s happening now?
The Forest Service has released new options for the American public to write in about. One of them keeps the Roadless Rule, and the others weaken forestland protections.
THE LOWDOWN:
On June 23, Secretary Rollins announced that the USDA is rescinding the 2001 Roadless Rule.
On Aug 29, the USDA published a notice of intent, kicking off a 21 -day comment period which ends September 19. The scoping period set the stage for the rulemaking. This was our opportunity to inform the USDA about which issues are important and therefore, which issues they should address when developing the EIS. We expect the DEIS this spring.
The proposed rollback of the 2001 Roadless Rule jeopardizes nearly 45 million acres of undeveloped backcountry forestland managed by the U.S. Forest Service, comprising around a third of the territory in our national forest system. These forests have only remained intact because of the Forest Service’s nearly 25-year-old commitment not to build roads in these areas for harmful activities like major logging operations or oil-and-gas drilling.
Since 2001, protected roadless areas have offered abundant outdoor recreation opportunities such as hunting, fishing, camping or other activities. Every year, millions of people take advantage of the free (or extremely affordable) access to these public lands. According to maps from Outdoor Alliance’s GIS Lab, roadless areas protect 11,337 climbing routes and boulder problems, more than 1,000 whitewater paddling runs, 43,826 miles of trail, and 20,298 mountain biking trails. Large sections of the Continental Divide, Pacific Crest, and Appalachian National Trails traverse protected roadless areas.
Alaska
Juneau - April 1
Kake - April 3
Arizona
Flagstaff - TBD
Tucson - April 16th 5-8 PM
California
Tahoe - April 6
Sacramento - TBD - April
Los Angeles -TBD - April
South Lake Tahoe / Truckee / Earth Day events TBD - April
Indiana
Bloomington - April 4
Montana
Bozeman, Helena, Red Lodge - April 6
Dillon - TBD
New Hampshire
Conway - TBD
Join Public Meetings across the country to speak up for Roadless Forests
Before enacting the Roadless Area Conservation Rule in 2001, the administration held approximately 600 public meetings to share their plans and get public feedback. The current administration has not announced any public meetings, so groups across the country are organizing their own.
This list of public meetings will be updated as they are organized. We will link to RSVP forms as they go live:
New Mexico
Albuquerque - TBD
Silver City - TBD
Taos - TBD
Las Cruces - TBD
Pecos - TBD
North Carolina
Asheville - April 15, 6-8pm
Oregon
Portland - April 8
Bend - April 6
Eugene - April 14 , 5-7pm
Utah
Salt Lake City - May 13, 5:30 pm at the Millcreek City Hall Grandview Room
Washington State
Seattle - TBD
Methow Valley* week of April 27th
Wyoming
Laramie - TBD
Jackson - April 9th
Sheridan - TBD
Cody - TBD
Lander - TBD