Harley,
Basically two changes:

1. Opening up the Tongass National Forest to roadbuilding and by extension logging.

2. Essentially keeping the Clinton roadless rules intact BUT giving the Governors of the states where the Nat. Forest are the option of building roads.

My beef, and Grandpa it would be my beef no matter which Party held the Presidency. It essentially turns National Forests into State Forests. If the Governors have the ability to override the roadless rules, they essentially have gained a management "veto" over the National Forest. Secondly, I have always been concerned with the Tongass resource and what the Wood Products Industry has done with the resource. A majority (pretty vast majority BTW) have been sent to Japan as raw logs. The remainder were generally used in the Pulp and Paper Mills in Sitka and Ketchican. Pretty wasteful if you ask me for some of the most amazing stands of Sitka Spruce in the world.
_________________________
"You're not a g*dda*n looney Martini, you're a fisherman"

R.P. McMurphy - One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest