Climate Forests Campaign Responds to Trump Administration Rollback of the Roadless Rule

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 23, 2025

Climate Forests Campaign Responds to Trump Administration Rollback of the Roadless Rule
Longstanding Rule Protects More Than 58 Million Acres of Forestlands 

SANTA FE – Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced on Monday a rollback of the Roadless Rule, a policy that has protected more than 58 million acres of our National Forest System against costly and harmful road building and logging since 2001. This announcement follows on the heels of the Trump administration’s directives to increase timber production by 25% on public lands. 

For nearly a quarter of a century, the Roadless Rule has helped to safeguard some of America’s last remaining wild and intact forests. These protected areas offer abundant opportunities for outdoor recreation and provide essential wildlife habitat. Roadless forests protect clean drinking water, serve as buffers against climate change, and offer myriad opportunities for recreation, hunting and fishing.

The rule was created after concerned members of the public sent in more than 1.6 million comments in favor of adopting it — more comments than any other rule in the nation’s history.

Organizations from the Climate Forests Campaign issued the following statement in response to today’s announcement: 

“The Roadless Rule was enacted more than two decades ago with overwhelming public support. Today’s move to rescind this successful policy opens up some of the last truly wild forests remaining in this country to logging and road-building and is deeply irresponsible forest management. This will cause immense damage to public lands, drinking water, and wildlife, and also threatens to increase wildfires.”

While the Trump administration has suggested that wildfire risk is an underlying reason for these sweeping policy changes, rolling back the Roadless Rule actually threatens to cause more fires, because human-caused fire ignitions are far more likely in roaded landscapes. Community protection from wildfire depends on dedicated programming and funding for home hardening, emergency planning, and defensible spaces. Backcountry logging projects that are supposed to be for the purposes of “fuel reduction” are an often ineffective wildfire management solution that can increase fire risk, lack durability, jeopardize our healthiest forests, and divert resources from more effective approaches.”

Today’s announcement is about more profit for the timber industry, not protecting our national forests or safeguarding communities from wildfire.”