The U.S. Forest Service is inviting public input on the management of commercial, motorized towboat operations within the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in Minnesota, as it considers amending the Forest Plan to address this issue. Political compromise prevented Congress from fully outlawing motorboats when the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness Act passed in 1978, but the law placed strict limits on motorboat use in the Wilderness. Despite such limits, the Forest Service has allowed commercial, motorized towboat use to increase over the years. Please take the survey today to protect and defend wilderness character in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW)! Spanning 1.1 million acres, the Boundary Waters is the largest Wilderness east of the Rockies and north of the Everglades. With its 1,000-plus pristine lakes and 1,200 miles of rivers and streams, the BWCAW is unique as our nation’s only canoe-country wilderness, a place backcountry paddlers can experience the same way we have for centuries. Motorized towboats are profitable commercial operations that ferry canoe parties as far into the BWCAW as motorboat use is allowed in order to save canoeists time. Despite their name, towboats typically do not tow canoes, but rather carry them on overhead racks. Towboat use makes many lakes—or chains of lakes—wilderness sacrifice zones with motorboats constantly buzzing back and forth. Making matters worse, commercial, motorized towboat customers are often wilderness paddlers who want to save time getting to the adjacent Quetico Provincial Park on the Ontario side of the border, which generally has a wilder feel than the BWCAW. But the towboats degrade the Wilderness for wildlife and other visitors as they zoom through. In February 2023, Wilderness Watch filed a second round of litigation challenging this unlawful commercial, motorized towboat use in the BWCAW. This public comment opportunity is an attempt by the Forest Service to show it is being responsive to its obligations to protect the Boundary Waters from excessive commercial motorboat use, so please weigh in. Please take the survey by December 31 and make sure to drive home the point that motorboats are antithetical to Wilderness. If you have first-hand experience of how motorized towboats have negatively impacted your Wilderness experiences in the Boundary Waters, please make sure to mention it. Please also consider sharing the following points when you take the survey: |