News
3d
Grist on MSNWhy the Forest Service is logging after Hurricane Helene — and why some say it’s a mistakeVolunteers, scientists, and hikers are asking for transparency in a process they say could prioritize profit over ecosystems.
Of the nearly 800,000 acres of trees that Helene downed, about 187,000 lie in national forests. Salvage logging — a practice ...
The Arizona native moved to Hurricane to study at Southern Utah University and has owned his home for a little more than a year. Even though Lone Rock Condos aren’t the white-picket-fence ...
“My wife works for the Forest Service,” he said. Indeed, government employees make up 23% of the workforce in Utah’s Garfield County and 25% in Wayne County. These salaries and the benefits ...
Hosted on MSN1mon
South Carolina hikers can return to the trails as popular park reopens, five months after Hurricane HeleneIn September, Jones Gap was battered by the hurricane, which uprooted trees and wrecked miles of mountainous South Carolina forest. The park is still recovering and will look a little different to ...
SALT LAKE CITY— In response to a lawsuit by conservation groups, the U.S. Forest Service pulled its authorization of logging within 147,000 acres of sensitive roadless habitat in Utah’s Ashley ...
In the months after Hurricane Helene leveled thousands of acres in Pisgah National Forest, John Beaudet and other volunteers cleared downed trees from the Appalachian National Scenic Trail.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results