Comment on FR Doc # 2026-13281

AnonymousOpposeIndividual
Summary: A hiker and private citizen opposes the proposal to narrow the public's right to comment on Forest Service directives. The commenter argues that public participation is essential for accountability in managing public lands and requests that the Forest Service preserve the right to comment on both the Manual and the Handbooks.
I’m writing to oppose this proposal to narrow the public’s right to comment on Forest Service directives. I hike on national forest land, and the decisions buried in these rulebooks shape every acre of it. In 2018, the Forest Service concluded that its Handbooks contain standards and guidelines that directly affect the public, and it expanded public comment to cover them. That conclusion was correct. The Handbooks govern grazing permits, timber sale analysis, land management planning, and special-use decisions that shape these lands for everyone who depends on them. Changes to those guides deserve more public notice and comment, not less. Public participation is how management of 193 million acres of public land stays accountable to the people who own it. That accountability is worth protecting. I urge the Forest Service to withdraw this proposal and preserve the public’s right to comment on directive changes, whether they appear in the Manual or the Handbooks.

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