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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gut Trader who wrote (515268)12/24/2003 10:53:02 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
BUSH...THE DESTRUCTOR OF OUR FORESTS, TREES, AIR< and WATER strikes our OLD GROWTH FORESTS....HE MUST BE IMPEACHED

Bush Policy to Allow More Logging
in Alaska Forest

Wed Dec 24, 1:24 AM ET

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - The Bush administration opened
up undeveloped areas of the largest U.S. national forest to logging on
Tuesday, scrapping a Clinton-era rule aimed at protecting the
wilderness.

The U.S. Forest Service announced that it will
exempt the Tongass National Forest in
southeastern Alaska from a national rule
prohibiting timber cutting in roadless areas.
The decision means about 300,000 acres of
dense, old-growth rain forest will be available
for logging.

The forest covers nearly 17 million acres.

Timber industry supporters said it would help revitalize a regional timber
industry that has faltered since the area's two pulp mills closed in the
1990s.

"We welcome this good news, coming as it has at Christmas time, as a
boost to the people and communities of Southeast," Gov. Frank
Murkowski said in a news release. "This was a vital step in our plan to
rebuild the Southeast timber industry. The Tongass should again support
a vibrant timber industry."

Environmentalists portrayed the policy change as a violation of public
trust. They said the road-building likely to accompany the new logging
could affect 2.5 million acres of the forest.

"The Bush administration has turned its back on the public, good
science and the law in its effort to clearcut the Tongass," Tom Waldo, a
Juneau-based attorney for the environmental group Earthjustice, said in a
news release.

"This is obviously a Christmas present from the Bush administration to
the timber industry, which wants the right to clearcut in America's
greatest temperate rainforest."

The Tongass sprawls over spruce- and hemlock-covered islands,
rain-drenched coastline, mountains and glaciers. It has long been the
subject of debate between environmental and timber-industry interests.

Although parts of the forest have been heavily logged, the remainder is
considered North America's last major old-growth temperate rain forest.
The old-growth trees are prized by environmentalists, fishermen and
hunters for their contribution to the natural habitat, but also by loggers for
their commercial value.

The two sides disagree about the effect of roads on the forest.
Environmentalists say they damage the habitat, while development
advocates say they allow local residents better access to the forest for a
variety of uses.
THERE IS NO EXCUSE FOR THIS DESTRUCTION.......
BUSH IS POWER MAD
CC