Trump pushes to allow new logging in Alaska's Tongass National Forest
President Trump has instructed Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue to exempt Alaskas 16.7-million-acre Tongass National Forest from logging restrictions imposed nearly 20 years ago, according to three people briefed on the issue, after privately discussing the matter with the states governor aboard Air Force One.
The move would affect more than half of the worlds largest intact temperate rainforest, opening it to potential logging, energy and mining projects. It would undercut a sweeping Clinton administration policy known as the roadless rule, which has survived a decades-long legal assault.
Trump has taken a personal interest in forest management, a term he told a group of lawmakers last year he has redefined since taking office.
Politicians have tussled for years over the fate of the Tongass, a massive stretch of southeastern Alaska replete with old-growth spruce, hemlock and cedar, rivers running with salmon, and dramatic fjords. President Bill Clinton put more than half of it off limits to logging just days before leaving office in 2001, when he barred the construction of roads in 58.5 million acres of undeveloped national forest across the country. President George W. Bush sought to reverse that policy, holding a handful of timber sales in the Tongass before a federal judge reinstated the Clinton rule.
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