News

The Ashley National Forest, located about 70 miles east of Salt Lake City, contains both the High Uintas Wilderness Area and King’s Peak, Utah’s tallest mountain.
Apparently no one told Ashley National Forest Supervisor Susan Eickhoff, who approved the destruction of a 12-mile corridor of widths between 100 to 1,000 feet wide. Biden lies and the forest dies.
Officials have closed roads to the Ute Fire\nLookout in the Ashley National Forest's Flaming Gorge Ranger\nDistrict because of black bear activity at campsites and at Ute\nTower.
SALT LAKE CITY— Conservation groups sued the U.S. Forest Service today for approving logging within up to 147,000 acres of sensitive roadless habitat in Utah’s Ashley National Forest.. In October 2023 ...
Christmas tree permits for the Ashley National Forest will be available soon, opening up another option for Utahns looking for the perfect tree. Officials announced permits will be made available ...
The great news is the Ashley National Forest has been saved from a “landscape scale” deforestation plan in which the Forest Service planned to bulldoze in skid trails to log and burn up 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 ...
The decision affecting the Ashley National Forest follows a U.S. appeals court ruling in August that struck down a critical approval involving the Uinta Basin Railway, a proposed 88-mile (142 ...
The United States Forest Service has withdrawn its permission for the Uinta Basin Railway to be built on 12 miles of Ashley National Forest land in northeastern Utah. The railway, if built, would ...