The Trump administration wants to open precious East Coast forests to logging and mining

The fight over the roadless rule has long focused on the West, but its repeal could fragment some of the last pristine forests in the eastern United States.

A series of snow covered pine trees with a sign in front of the trees.
One of the forests targeted is the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest near Deer Lodge, Montana.
(Image credit: stitched photography via Getty Images)

This coverage is made possible through a partnership between Grist, WABE, Atlanta’s NPR station; and WBEZ, a public radio station serving the Chicago metropolitan region.

When most people think about national forests, they imagine vast Western landscapes: Alaska, the Rockies, the Pacific Northwest. But millions of acres of federal woodlands dot the eastern half of the country, too. These great swaths of vibrant ecosystems have long been free of roads, protected by a policy called, appropriately enough, the "roadless rule."

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