Hannah Niknonow

Humans are really good at building roads. Across our National Forests, roads connect us to some of the best hiking, foraging, hunting, and fishing spots in the country. Sportsmen and women rely on this network to reach the quiet refuges that lie between roaded areas—the wild pockets where we seek fur, fin, and feather on the public lands system.

In today’s loud, fast-moving world, those remaining roadless places are rare, and generations of hunters and anglers have spoken up, voted, and fought to protect them. Now it’s time to do so again.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s current proposal to roll back the Roadless Rule threatens more than 6 million acres of Montana’s national forests. As Montanans, we know these roadless areas are some of the last and best places to

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