AESS 2017 Draft Conference Session Schedule
Biodiversity Conservation and the 2012 Planning Rule
Abstract
National forest management plans throughout the country are currently being revised under the
2012 Planning Rule. As will be discussed, the 2012 rule provides high levels of agency discretion and
management flexibility. The rule does not require maintaining viable populations of all native plant and
animal species. The agency is required to conserve viable populations of “species of conservation
concern,” yet the regional forester is granted sole discretion in designating these species. The 2012 rule is
highly controversial, primarily for the reason that it grants the agency too much discretion. Wildlife
management experts are concerned that the biodiversity provisions within the rule will prove ineffective
in the conservation of native wildlife.
On closer examination, the conservation mandates presented by the 2012 rule concerning species
of conservation concern, and other at-risk species, are actually quite strong, and if strictly followed would
influence every aspect of national forest management and effectively constrain agency discretion.
Properly understood, the 2012 Planning Rule provides a mix of strong biodiversity provisions with
agency discretion and management flexibility. The key to effective biodiversity conservation in the
national forests, and an equitable balance of interests, is to ensure that the conservation mandates for at-
risk species are genuinely met, at both the management plan and individual project levels. The National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) plays an essential role in this. NEPA regulations remove biodiversity
conservation in the national forests from the high levels of discretion and subjectivity granted the agency
by the 2012 rule, providing the “strong” biodiversity provisions within the rule the strength they have.
The 2012 Planning Rule, in the context of NEPA, provides a potentially effective means of conserving
native biodiversity in the national forests.