ENGULFED – A house on Bart Island, in Thimbleberry Bay, is consumed by fire Wednesday evening. The Sitka Fire Department was able to prevent the house at right from catching fire. No one was injured in the fire. Twenty firefighters were dispatched to the island, which is accessed by a foot bridge and a series of dirt driveways, about 1,000 feet from Sawmill Creek Road. (Photo provided by Dave Moore)

Fire Destroys Island Home, No One Injured
16 May 2024 16:01

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    A fire destroyed a small island house in Thimbleberry [ ... ]

Peltola Adds Haulout To Federal Funding List
16 May 2024 15:52

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola has included $5.8 million for  [ ... ]

City Loses $58K in Scam
16 May 2024 15:51

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The city announced Wednesday that $62,795 was stolen  [ ... ]

Talent Show, Art on Tap for Porch Fest Saturday
16 May 2024 14:42

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    A day of street performances, art, food and music, cap [ ... ]

Legislature Goes OT, Gets Big Job Done
16 May 2024 14:41

By JAMES BROOKS,
CLAIRE STREMPLE and
YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
    The 33rd Alaska State Legislature [ ... ]

Legislature Approves Carbon-Storage Bill
16 May 2024 14:39

By YERETH ROSEN
Alaska Beacon
    The Alaska Legislature has passed a bill that combines carbon sto [ ... ]

May 16, 2024, Police Blotter
16 May 2024 14:31

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
May 15
Shortly after noon, callers complain [ ... ]

May 16, 2024, Community Happenings
16 May 2024 14:28

U.S. Coast Guard
Sets Town Hall
On Boat Accident
The U.S. Coast Guard will hold a town hall 5-8 p.m. to [ ... ]

FY 2025 City Budget Covers New Projects
15 May 2024 15:30

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    After four months of special meetings to review and d [ ... ]

Study: Many Mountain Goats Die in Avalanches
15 May 2024 14:31

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Living amid craggy peaks and remnant glaciers, Southea [ ... ]

Sitka High Actors State 'I Hate Hamlet'
15 May 2024 14:30

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    In the play opening Thursday at the Sitka Performing  [ ... ]

Pensions Reboot Effort Fails On Senate Floor
15 May 2024 14:29

By CLAIRE STREMPLE
Alaska Beacon
    A late-session attempt to salvage a proposal that would revive [ ... ]

May 15, 2024, Police Blotter
15 May 2024 14:27

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
May 14
At 7:46 a.m. a reckless driver was r [ ... ]

May 15, 2024, Community Happenings
15 May 2024 14:26

Life Celebration
For Carl Peterson
The family of Carl Peterson, 85, will have a celebration of his lif [ ... ]

State Proposes Sale of Stratton Library
14 May 2024 15:59

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The Alaska Department of Education is taking public c [ ... ]

After Four-Year Dry Spell Swim Classes Fill Quickl...
14 May 2024 15:55

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    Sitka’s pent-up demand for swim lessons was in full [ ... ]

Track and Field Preps for Regional Meet
14 May 2024 15:47

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    Racing against schools from across Southeast in the l [ ... ]

Lady Wolves Face Crimson Bears
14 May 2024 15:13

By Sentinel Staff
    Sitka’s softballers split a three-game series with Juneau-Douglas Friday a [ ... ]

Senate Targets Vandalizing Of Churches, Synagogues
14 May 2024 15:03

By CLAIRE STREMPLE
Alaska Beacon
    Members of the Alaska Senate approved a bill that would increa [ ... ]

May 14, 2024, Police Blotter
14 May 2024 13:28

Sitka police received the following calls by 8 a.m. today:
May 13
At 12:43 a.m. an out-of-town caller  [ ... ]

May 14, 2024, Community Happenings
14 May 2024 13:26

Robin Klanott, 61
Dies in Anchorage
Longtime Sitka resident Robin Klanott passed away at Anchorage Reg [ ... ]

Assembly to Vote On Budget Up 14.6%
13 May 2024 15:38

By SHANNON HAUGLAND
Sentinel Staff Writer
    The Assembly is winding up work on the city budgets f [ ... ]

Legislators Move to End Some Newspaper Notices
13 May 2024 15:32

By JAMES BROOKS
Alaska Beacon
    Alaska state lawmakers are preparing for a final vote on a bill t [ ... ]

Wolves Sweep Falcons 3-0 in Home Series
13 May 2024 13:47

By GARLAND KENNEDY
Sentinel Sports Editor
    Playing in variable weather in the last regular seaso [ ... ]

Other Articles

Daily Sitka Sentinel

Roadless Rule Opponents Change Language

By JAMES BROOKS

Alaska Beacon

The state of Alaska, a coalition of business groups and a pair of electric-power organizations have opened a new round in the generation-long fight over environmental protections in Southeast Alaska’s Tongass National Forest.

On Sept. 8, the state and two other groups of plaintiffs filed three separate federal lawsuits to challenge a Biden administration rule restricting new roads in parts of the forest, which is home to some of America’s last stands of old-growth trees.

Each lawsuit asks U.S. District Court Judge Sharon Gleason to overturn the new rule and prior versions.  

The Roadless Rule, as it is known, was enacted (and sued over) as early as 2001 by logging proponents, but the latest lawsuits bring a new wrinkle: In more than 100 pages of court documents, the word “logging” appears only once.

Instead, plaintiffs are arguing that the federal government’s rules make clean-energy projects and other economic development unaffordable.

The legal complaints cite prospective geothermal and hydroelectric power plants, as well as hypothetical metal mines whose products could be used for green technologies.

“You’ve got true roadblocks for very desirable projects. These are projects that are going to provide cost savings and environmental benefit,” said Luke Wake, an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation, which is representing the Inside Passage Electric Cooperative and the Alaska Power Association in one of the lawsuits.

The state of Alaska, which is leading a second lawsuit, has opposed the Tongass Roadless Rule through Democratic, Republican and independent administrations alike.

In a written statement, Gov. Mike Dunleavy said that “Alaskans deserve access to the resources that the Tongass provides — jobs, renewable energy resources, and tourism, not a government plan that treats human beings within a working forest like an invasive species.”

The third lawsuit, which includes the Alaska Chamber of Commerce and Resource Development Council of Alaska among its plaintiffs, is being led by former Gov. and former U.S. Sen. Frank Murkowski, the father of current U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska.

Jim Clark, Frank Murkowski’s former chief of staff and an attorney working on the case, said he remembers when he represented the Alaska Forest Association in a prior lawsuit on the issue.

“This case is old enough to drink in any bar in Alaska,” he said.

In the years since he first worked on the issue, Southeast Alaska’s logging industry has almost entirely vanished. A pulp mill in Ketchikan is now a cruise ship terminal; another in Sitka is a sanctuary for bears.

Overturning the Roadless Rule isn’t about clear-cutting anymore, he said. Instead, it’s about improving access for projects that now need special approval.

“It’s not like we don’t have access under the Biden law, notwithstanding the Roadless Rule, but it is a barrier,” he said.

In legal filings, the Inside Passage Electric Cooperative offered an example: It hopes to build a power line between Kake and Petersburg, allowing those communities to share low-cost power.

The project was expected to cost $17.5 million, but because of the Roadless Rule, it would have to be maintained by helicopter, causing the projected cost to balloon to $65 million.

“As a result of these heightened costs, the Kake-Petersburg Intertie Project remains stalled. But IPEC would resume efforts to further this project if it could obtain road access,” said Jodi Mitchell, IPEC’s CEO, in legal testimony.

Clark said that logging companies aren’t part of these new lawsuits because logging is restricted under a new forest plan, something separate from the Roadless Rule, and the prospects of changing the forest plan are limited.

“There’s no way we’ll be able to change the forest plan to make a difference here,” Clark said.

Kate Glover is an attorney with the environmental law firm Earthjustice, which has participated in prior Roadless Rule lawsuits.

Glover said the attempt to switch to another focus in the Roadless Rule “is certainly noteworthy,” but that the issue “really is about logging,” which was the primary focus of the original rule.

The three lawsuits — which are expected to be combined into one by U.S. District Court Judge Sharon Gleason — will continue a 22-year-old dispute over the extent to which the U.S. Forest Service has the authority under existing law to restrict road building in the forest.

In 2001, the federal government wrote a nationwide rule restricting road building in designated areas. Roads are needed for intensive logging.

The state of Alaska challenged the rule in court, and the federal government agreed to exempt much of Alaska from it.

That changed in 2011, after a federal judge ruled in favor of environmental groups who had filed a lawsuit arguing that the Alaska exemption was unlawful.

The state appealed the verdict and saw it overturned by a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, but a subsequent appeal to the full Circuit Court saw the Alaska exemption again overturned.

The state challenged the legality of the 2001 rule overall in a separate lawsuit filed in Washington, D.C., but lost that case.

After the election of President Donald Trump, the state supported a new roadless rule that allows Tongass development. The Trump administration passed the new rule, but lawsuits stymied its implementation, and the Biden administration’s new rule, enacted in January, overwrites the Trump rule.

Though the state and allied plaintiffs have repeatedly lost in court on the issue, attorneys say the legal groundwork has changed over the past few years.

The U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 ruling in West Virginia v. EPA has the potential to significantly reduce the power of federal agencies to write regulations that aren’t specifically authorized by Congress, and in summer 2024, the Supreme Court is expected to reinterpret a standard known as the “Chevron doctrine” and again restrict the authority of federal agencies.

“All of which makes you think the Supreme Court is more favorable,” Clark said.

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https://alaskabeacon.com/james-brooks

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20 YEARS AGO

May 2004

Photo caption: Jimmy Bracket, second mate of the new fast ferry Fairweather gives a tour of the $36 million ship to Sitkans Leslie Pellett and Jeff vonRekowski Thursday. The 235-foot ferry can carry 35 cars and 150 passengers, go as fast as 42 knots and consumes 560 gallons of fuel an hour.


50 YEARS AGO

May 1974

Two changes have been announced in the cruise ship schedules. The first ship to arrive in Sitka will be the Xanadu on May 26, and an additional voyage of the Arcadia will be on Sept. 21, which will mean two ships in port here at the same time: the Arcadia and the Spirit of London. Sitka will have two cruise ships in port on seven days this summer.

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