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The Travel Management Rule of 2005 One of the greatest threats to the public lands of the Sky Island Region is unmanaged motorized recreation. The Travel Management Rule, published by the U.S. Forest Service in 2005, incorporates changes to travel-management regulations intended to protect National Forest System lands against this threat. Through the planning process required by this rule, each National Forest, or other Forest Service administrative unit, will produce a “motor vehicle use map” that limits motorized travel to designated roads, trails, and areas. Some of the strengths of the 2005 rule for biodiversity protection in the Sky Islands include Nevertheless, the rule also presents challenges for the conservation community: In the Sky Island Region, the Forest Service is holding public meetings to ask for the collaboration of groups and individual citizens in deciding on route designations. These meetings are an excellent opportunity for the conservation-minded to participate in mapping the future of our region's National Forests. Want more information about the rule, the impacts of unmanaged motorized recreation, and how you can get involved? Click here for a copy of the 2005 Travel Management Rule, published in the Federal Register. Click here for a link to the Forest Service's Travel Management and Off-highway Vehicle Program. Click here to explore the Center for Biological Diversity's Off-road Vehicle Reform Campaign. Click here for a link to Wildlands CPR, the only national conservation group in the United States that specifically targets off-road vehicle abuse of public lands and actively promotes wildland restoration, road removal, and the prevention of wildland road construction. |
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©Copyright 2006. photographs by Sky Jacobs, used by permission. |
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