As the original highways used to explore our country, rivers offer a unique way to experience
backcountry areas by water. The few remaining wild rivers are invaluable to Americans who prefer
to experience nature in their canoes, kayaks and rafts. Nowhere else in the contiguous United
States can paddlers find as many remote and wild whitewater rivers as exist in Idaho. Some of the
most treasured rivers flow through backcountry roadless areas including the North Fork Boise,
Upper Deadwood, Upper Secesh, South Fork Salmon, Meadow Creek, Upper Fish Creek, White Sand
Creek, Little North Fork Clearwater, and Coeur d'Alene. In addition to the rivers that flow
directly through roadless areas, many additional rivers are bordered by roadless areas that
define their superb scenery and water quality. These include most notably the Lochsa, North Fork
Clearwater, Middle Fork Boise, and the South Fork of the Payette. The Lochsa and the Payette are
commercially rafted by large numbers of people, supporting significant regional economies.
A big part of what makes these landscapes what they are, from scenery to the solitude and
aesthetics, is that they are in Roadless Areas. Roadless Areas are not quite wilderness, but they
feel that way, and they tend to be more accessible and open to a variety of sustainable
recreational pursuits. Roadless Areas make up about 31% of our National Forests and are
ecological gems with clean air, water and plenty of wildlife.
Back in 2001 the Federal government proposed to protect these areas in a simple way - stop
building new roads. Without roads, it's pretty tough to harvest timber or mine phosphate. The
American public loved the idea and the "2001 Roadless Rule" became one of the most popular
federal regulations in history.
Things are about to change. Even though these are National Forests, the Federal government now
wants to let individual states drive how roadless areas are managed, letting them re-jigger
different levels of ecosystem protection and impinge on the wild qualities that make these places
what they are to paddlers and everyone else that uses these lands and waters in a sustainable
manner.
The first state to take the plunge is Idaho. Colorado is next. There are Roadless Areas in 39
states across the country. Fortunately the Federal government is circling back and asking the
public what they think about this new state-driven plan, starting with the Idaho plan. Aside from
setting the stage for other states, Idaho is particularly important because with 9.3 million
acres of Roadless Areas, it has the largest intact ecosystem in the lower 48 states.
We already have more than 380,000 miles of Forest System roads - nine times the size of the
federal interstate system.
To Protect these Experiences We Need Your Help Today
Tell the Forest System what you think. Should we keep these places wild and thriving with
qualities that make places worth climbing up and carving down and treat them like the national
resources that they are, or whittle them away,
here and
there, state by state until the edge that makes Roadless Areas unique becomes dull and then
gone?