spectr17

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September 15, 2004

Sawtooth to ban motorized off-road travel

Forest overseers undertake revision of travel management plan

By GREG STAHL, Idaho Mtn Express

The Sawtooth National Forest is beginning a process that will determine how motorized travel is managed across the 1.8 million-acre Sawtooth National Forest. Photo by Willy Cook

The Sawtooth National Forest is eliminating motorized cross-country travel throughout the forest as a baseline starting point in its new travel management plan.

The agency announced the planning process during a press conference Thursday, Sept. 9, in Twin Falls. The process will effect change in the forest’s Ketchum, Fairfield and Minidoka ranger districts. The Sawtooth National Recreation Area is managed under a separate plan.

“Basically, what we will be doing is eliminating cross country travel, which is authorized by our current travel plan, on these three districts,” said Forest Supervisor Ruth Monahan. “Future motorized travel in these areas will be restricted to a system of designated roads, trails and areas, which we will develop with the help of the public.”

The purpose of revising the travel plan is to enhance recreation opportunities and protect natural resources, Monahan said. On the Ketchum Ranger District, public lands west of Highway 75 and south of Warm Springs Road are currently open to cross-country travel and will be affected by the new rule.

“We will accomplish this by working with the public to designate a system of roads, trails and areas for motorized vehicle use,” Monahan said. “This action we are taking here is consistent with the agency’s effort to develop a nationally consistent approach to travel management on the national forests.”

Winter use will not be addressed in this planning process.

Monahan said 38 percent of the Sawtooth National Forest is open to cross-country travel, but the lion’s share of open terrain is on the Minidoka Ranger District south of Twin Falls.

“Right now, the entire SNRA, 75 percent of Ketchum (Ranger District), 50 percent of Fairfield and 20 percent of Minidoka have designated routes,” Monhan said.

She stressed that an important part of the process is the special effort the forest is putting in to work with organized users and interest groups, local governments and state agencies.

“Some groups have already been working with us to provide descriptions and trail logs of the trails they use,” Monahan said. “We will be conducting a number of open houses in mid-September to provide an opportunity for people who do not belong to organized groups to provide input.

“In my mind, we’re really front loading this with the public, letting them build this pro0.posal with us. Often our trail users know as much about what’s happening on the ground as we do.”


Open houses scheduled

A series of open house events have been scheduled to provide people with information about the Sawtooth National Forest’s travel plan revision process. The schedule follows.

· Fairfield. Wednesday, Sept. 15 from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Fairfield Ranger District office.

· Malta. Wednesday, Sept. 15 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Malta Elementary School.

· Burley. Thursday, Sept. 16 from 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Burley High School.

· Twin Falls. Saturday, Sept. 18 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the KMVT-TV community room.

· Hailey. Monday, Sept. 20 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Old Blaine County Courthouse.

· Gooding. Monday, Sept. 27 from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Gooding City Library.

To be the most helpful, written comments are requested by Oct. 31.
 

hunthog

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Good! I hate the darn things and too many people use the forest as their private driveway. Now if we could just get Oregon to close the ATV trails they cleared through previously excellent Elk habitat and get California to enforce the ban on using them off road in the National Forest we'd have it made.

I had guys driving right up my deer trail this year.

I say, if you're handicaped make exceptions, if your lazy stay in camp
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. Blunt but honest.
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Hunthog
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FTTPOW

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Hunthog, that takes a lot of nerve saying that. Now what if someone with more money, power and influence than you says "Good. I hate the darn hunters, and too many hunters use the forest for their own hunting preserve."? Why don't some of you realize that the publicly owned forests are for everyone to use? For you to condem one group's choice of usage, is just as harmful to their sport as banning hunting would be to yours. If you're not willing to share OUR public land, how much longer do you think we'll all get to enjoy it? Everything gets regulated on how, when and where it's allowed to be used. That's the way it needs to be in order for everyone to enjoy public land. When one group thinks they're the only ones to be entitled to use it, we all lose. Once one group gets banned, it sets a precidence on how any group can ban their opposition. This doesn't apply just to Idaho and other Western States. There's public land across the country that someone is always trying to control to restrict someone else's usage. If you aren't willing to share, maybe YOU"RE the one that needs to go!
 

COHunter

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FTTPOW
ATV's have really gotten out of hand out here in the West. They are really tearing the Forest's up by making they're "own" trails all over the place.

That and the fact that they push the animals further into the back country or private land where they are pretty much inaccessable. I can't speak for back East or any other state, but here in Colorado, folks would really like to see they're use banned out here, at least during the hunting season which is when they're here in the largest numbers
 
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