Management of Recreation Uses on the Upper Chattooga River
In April 2005, the Washington Office of the USDA Forest Service issued a decision on an appeal by American Whitewater of the Sumter National Forest’s Revised Land and Resource Management Plan (forest plan). The forest plan, issued in January 2004, continued a restriction on boating in the upper reaches of the Chattooga River (approximately 20 miles of the total of 57 miles) that has been in place since 1976. In its appeal, American Whitewater was concerned that boating was unfairly excluded and stated that the Forest Plan should be changed to allow “year-round access for self-guided groups of non-commercial, non-motorized canoeists and kayakers” to float the river.
The decision on the appeal issued by the Washington Office did not change the management of the Chattooga Wild and Scenic River but directed the Southern Regional Office and the Sumter National Forest to do additional work, specifically to conduct an appropriate visitor use capacity analysis to collect information for reassessing the decision and to involve affected and interested parties. Links to the documents associated with the capacity analysis are available below.
In August 2009, the forest supervisors of the Sumter, Chattahoochee and Nantahala national forests identified Alternative 4 of the Upper Chattooga Environmental Assessment (EA) as the agency's decision for the management of recreation uses for the upper Chattooga River. The decision, which emphasized year-round high-quality trout fishing while providing boating opportunities on the main stem upper Chattooga River, was withdrawn on December 21, 2009 to allow for additional analysis. As a result, the status quo is preserved on the river (meaning no boating is allowed above the Highway 28 bridge) until the forests issue three new decisions, probably in the spring.