Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER CXIII— - SMITH RIVER NATIONAL RECREATION AREA › § 460bbb–3
Manage the recreation area like other National Forest lands to protect why it was set up. The Secretary must offer many kinds of recreation and provide services and facilities such as trails, campgrounds, and roads for camping, hiking, hunting, and fishing. They must work to improve fish runs and water quality, control landslides, and limit activities that disturb soil. Off‑road vehicles may be used only on marked routes. The Secretary must protect public health and safety and guard the area from fire, insects, and disease. Cutting trees for timber is allowed only in places the law specifically permits, and when it is done it must reduce habitat damage and keep a variety of tree sizes and wildlife habitat. Cutting trees next to certain streams is allowed only for safety, to keep trails or roads, to build or protect facilities, for fire protection, or to help fish and wildlife. In areas where timber cutting is not allowed, removing dead or damaged trees is normally not done unless the Secretary makes a written finding that removal is needed to keep or improve ecological diversity; that decision cannot be delegated and can be appealed and reviewed by a court. The Secretary must also protect Port‑Orford‑cedar, preserve old growth except where harvest is allowed, restore past damage, monitor water, air, wildlife, and fish, make a plan for native trout, and work with other agencies. The area has eight management zones with different focuses, including back‑country and whitewater, protecting ecological diversity, wildlife and scenic values, wild river and roadless recreation, river canyon recreation, rustic family use, a timber production zone managed for sustained yield and diversity, and the Siskiyou Wilderness which is managed under the Wilderness Act. The Gasquet‑Orleans Road corridor—from the east edge of section 36, T.14 N., R.3 E. to the middle of section 26, T.14 N., R.4 E.—is added to the Siskiyou Wilderness. River segments designated as wild and scenic must be managed under both this law and the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, and the stricter rule applies if they conflict.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 460bbb–3
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73