SUBPART A—National Forest System Land and Resource Management Planning (§219.1 to §219.36)
- 219.1—Purpose.
- 219.2—Principles.
- 219.3—Overview.
- 219.4—Identification and consideration of issues.
- 219.5—Information development and interpretation.
- 219.6—Proposed actions.
- 219.7—Plan decisions.
- 219.8—Amendment.
- 219.9—Revision.
- 219.10—Site-specific decisions.
- 219.11—Monitoring and evaluation for adaptive management.
- 219.12—Collaboration and cooperatively developed landscape goals.
- 219.13—Coordination among Federal agencies.
- 219.14—Involvement of State and local governments.
- 219.15—Interaction with American Indian tribes and Alaska Natives.
- 219.16—Relationships with interested individuals and organizations.
- 219.17—Interaction with private landowners.
- 219.18—Role of advisory committees.
- 219.19—Ecological, social, and economic sustainability.
- 219.20—Ecological sustainability.
- 219.21—Social and economic sustainability.
- 219.22—The overall role of science in planning.
- 219.23—The role of science in assessments, analyses, and monitoring.
- 219.24—Science consistency evaluations.
- 219.25—Science advisory boards.
- 219.26—Identifying and designating suitable uses.
- 219.27—Special designations.
- 219.28—Determination of land suitable for timber harvest.
- 219.29—Limitation on timber harvest.
- 219.30—Plan documentation.
- 219.31—Maintenance of the plan and planning records.
- 219.32—Objections to plan amendments or plan revisions.
- 219.33—Appeals of site-specific decisions.
- 219.34—Applicability.
- 219.35—Transition.
- 219.36—Definitions.