Hageman Pushes Repeal of Roadless Rule Citing Wildfire Risks
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
The Forbes Breaking News segment covers Rep. Harriet Hageman's questioning during a House Federal Lands Committee hearing on the state of federal forests and 2026 wildfire outlook. Hageman criticizes the 2001 Roadless Rule as locking up 58.5 million acres, including 3.2 million in Wyoming, and links it to increased wildfire hazards; Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz agrees it raises catastrophic fire risk and conflicts with multiple-use mandates.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately relays Hageman's claims and the Chief's responses on wildfire statistics and access issues, with numbers matching USDA and study data. Viewers miss broader context on the rule's documented benefits for habitat, water quality, and biodiversity, as well as nuances in the Johnston study showing greater resilience in roadless areas despite higher burn rates. The one-sided sourcing and selective emphasis on management failures create a pro-repeal framing consistent with Republican priorities. The 'ecologically devastating' admission is presented without transcript or sourcing details.
Key Moments
Roadless Rule locked up 58.5 million acres from management and access
Matches Clinton administration final rule and multiple official summaries of inventoried roadless areas.
US Attorney admitted the rule would be 'ecologically devastating' in certain areas
Hageman attributes the quote to a hearing; repeated in her public statements but no independent transcript or confirmation found in public records.
2021 Johnston study shows roadless areas burned at disproportionately higher rates
Study confirms higher burn rates in roadless areas despite cooler/moister conditions; also notes fewer ignitions and greater resilience.
28 million acres of roadless areas at high/very high wildfire hazard; over 8 million burned since 2001
Directly matches USDA 2025 press release on rescission and consistent reports from forest management groups.
Rule increases catastrophic wildfire risk and inhibits multiple-use management
Chief Schultz explicitly agrees in response; aligns with administration's stated rationale for rescission.
Notable Concerns
- One-sided presentation without opposing perspectives on conservation values
Sources Consulted
- Congresswoman Hageman Blasts Environmental Catastrophe 'Roadless Rule' As 2026 Wildfire Season Begins
- H.R. 7695 and S. 140 Would Permanently Repeal Roadless Rule
- Strong Support for Secretary Rollins' Rescission of the Roadless Rule
- Trump to rescind Roadless Rule, ending protections for 58 million acres nationwide
- Does conserving roadless wildland increase wildfire activity in western U.S. national forests?
- Three-decade record of contiguous-U.S. national forest wildfire activity
- The Long Road to Rescinding the Roadless Rule
- Protecting America's Wildest Forests: The Roadless Rule
- Protect Wyomingβs 3 Million+ Acres of Roadless Areas
- Hageman Bill Aims for Permanent Repeal of Roadless Rule
- Wyoming's Hageman aims to block future 'roadless areas' despite overwhelming support
- Amended Barrasso Bill Would Erase Clinton-Era Roadless Rule