Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

Why Trump’s Tariffs Didn’t Break Canada. Hint: It wasn’t Buy Canadian

By Andrew Dicapua, Canadian Chamber of Commerce
Maclean’s Magazine
January 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The Canadian and American economies are woven together tightly. So when Donald Trump slapped 25% tariffs on Canadian imports last year, many economists—myself included saw a disaster looming. …The most exposed sectors were those most dependent on US demand: steel, aluminum, autos, energy and lumber. …In our worst-case scenario, we expected it would shrink Canada’s GDP by 2.6 per cent, leading to a moderate recession and shaving nearly $2,000 a year off income for every Canadian. So far, however, that doomsday scenario hasn’t materialized. This was possible because of the Canada-US-Mexico trade agreement. …Avoiding the worst of the tariffs doesn’t mean we’ve won or even survived the trade war. Communities across the country are still hurting. …Regions in Quebec and British Columbia are under strain, with key industrial sectors—steel, aluminum, copper, lumber—are facing additional tariffs under Section 232 authority.

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Lumber to have ‘reset’ year in 2026: Raymond James

BNN Bloomberg
January 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Daryl Swetlishoff, senior managing director and head of equity research at Raymond James, joins BNN Bloomberg to discuss the lumber sector and what’s in store for it on 2026. [video length 5:44]

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CPKC 16 announces collective bargaining agreements ratified, tentative agreements reached

By Canadian Pacific Kansas City
Cision Newswire
January 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

CALGARY, Alberta — Canadian Pacific Kansas City said that 16 tentative collective bargaining agreements reached in recent weeks with various unions in the United States have all been ratified. All of the new, ratified five-year agreements provide increased wages to approximately 700 CPKC railroaders working in Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas and Wisconsin. …One agreement has been reached and ratified with the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET) representing approximately 300 locomotive engineers on the Soo Line property operating trains in Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, North Dakota and Wisconsin. Five agreements have been reached and ratified with the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen… Five agreements have been reached and ratified with the Transportation Communications Union (TCU/IAM) and American Railway and Airway Supervisors Association (ARASA)… 

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Domtar Announces Temporary Curtailment of Lumber Production for First Quarter of 2026

Domtar Corporation
January 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

MONTREAL, Quebec – Domtar announced a curtailment in its lumber production. Due to challenging market conditions, US tariffs, and ongoing economic uncertainty, the company will temporarily reduce its lumber production by 150 million board feet for the first quarter of 2026 across its facilities in Quebec, Ontario and the United States. “The demand for lumber in North America remains weak, requiring us to adjust our production levels in line with market conditions,” said Luc Thériault, CEO, Wood Products, and President – Canada, for Domtar. “While this decision is necessary, we are fully aware of the impact it will have on our employees, contractors, suppliers and the communities in which we operate.” Domtar will continue to monitor market conditions and adjust its production plans accordingly. Domtar has a workforce of nearly 14,000 employees in more than 60 locations across North America.

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Canada’s auto sector ‘hangs in the balance’ as CUSMA review looms in 2026

By Jesse Cnockaert
The Hill Times
January 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

With the fate of North America’s free trade pact on the line, 2026 will be a significant year for some of Canada’s hardest-hit sectors in the trade war with the United States—including auto, steel, forestry and aluminum—as they advocate for Ottawa to do what’s necessary to preserve the deal, and to also help these sectors in the meantime by following through on domestic support measures. …Derek Nighbor, CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada, said that Canada’s auto and forestry sectors are among the most highly-integrated with the US. While both sectors share this deep integration, Nighbor highlighted a critical distinction for forestry: unlike other industries, forestry facilities cannot be relocated to another country because the natural resource—the trees—remain in Canada. This comment comes amid heightened concerns regarding the 2026 CUSMA review and ongoing trade disputes, such as US softwood lumber tariffs. [to access the full story a Hill Times subscription is required]

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US says it reached deal with Taiwan to lower tariffs and boost investments

By Agence France-Presse
The Guardian
January 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The US said on Thursday that it had signed a deal with Taiwan to reduce tariffs on goods from the democratic island, while increasing Taiwanese semiconductor and tech companies’ investments in America. The agreement, the US commerce department said, “will drive a massive reshoring of America’s semiconductor sector”. Under the deal, Washington will lower tariffs on Taiwanese goods to 15% , down from a 20% “reciprocal” rate meant to address US trade deficits and practices it deems unfair. Sector-specific tariffs on Taiwanese auto parts, timber, lumber and wood products will also be capped at 15%, the US commerce department said. …Taiwan is a powerhouse in the manufacturing of semiconductor chips, which are the lifeblood of the global economy, as well as other electronics.

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Lumber and Building Material Dealers release 2026 national policy agenda

By National Lumber and Building Material Dealers Association
LBM Journal
January 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The National Lumber & Building Material Dealers Association (NLBMDA) released its 2026 National Policy Agenda (NPA), a comprehensive advocacy platform that outlines key priorities for the lumber and building material (LBM) industry in the coming year. …With Congress expected to take up housing legislation in 2026, NLBMDA’s NPA outlines a series of targeted recommendations designed to strengthen the residential construction market and improve housing affordability nationwide. …[Principles noted include]:

  • NLBMDA supports reaching an agreement on the longstanding US-Canadian softwood lumber dispute that brings stability and predictability to the pricing and availability of softwood lumber without the imposition of duties. Additionally, we strongly urge the United States Trade Representative and the Secretary of Commerce to consult with all stakeholders, including retailers and consumers of lumber products, in future discussions regarding any terms of trade in softwood lumber between the US and Canada.
  • NLBMDA supports a tariff exemption for cedar shakes and shingles manufactured in Canada and imported to the US

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Green Building Initiative Elects Sumayyah Theron as Chair of its Board of Directors

The Green Building Initiative
January 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Green Building Initiative (GBI) is pleased to announce its 2026 Board of Directors, including newly elected officers and directors approved by GBI membership, effective December 1, 2025. The Board will guide the organization’s strategic direction as it continues its mission to improve the built environment’s impact on climate and society. Sumayyah Theron, CEO and Founder of Avant‑garde Sustainable Solutions, will serve as Chair of the GBI Board of Directors for 2026. New and returning officers, along with directors serving multi‑year terms, were also elected. …“As Board Chair, we will benefit from her extensive knowledge of the global application of building performance standards, which is instrumental as GBI continues to expand its impact across sectors and international markets,” said Vicki Worden, CEO of GBI. Theron’s industry expertise includes years of volunteering and leadership through ASHRAE, Board-level service with the Illinois Green Alliance, and two years chairing GBI’s ANSI/GBI 01 standard – Green Globes for New Construction Energy Subcommittee.

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Trump says Americans ‘don’t need’ Canadian products, calls CUSMA ‘irrelevant’

By Kelly Geraldine Malone
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
January 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump said Tuesday the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement on trade is “irrelevant” to him and Americans don’t need Canadian products. “It expires very shortly and we could have it or not,” Trump said while touring a Ford plant in Michigan. “It wouldn’t matter to me. I think they want it. I don’t really care about it.” Trump statements have rattled Canada and Mexico ahead of a mandatory review this year of the future of the continental trade pact, known as CUSMA. The president told reporters that “Canada wants it” but the United States doesn’t need anything from its northern neighbour. The three countries have started domestic consultations on the review and Dominic LeBlanc, the minister in charge of Canada-U.S. relations, is set to meet with U.S. counterparts in mid-January to launch formal CUSMA talks. The trade pact has shielded Canada and Mexico from the worst impacts of Trump’s tariffs.

Related coverage in the Juno News, by Quinn Patrick: Trump scoffs at trade deal renegotiations, says “no real advantage” for U.S.

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U.S. Endowment for Forestry & Communities and Georgia Tech Collaborate through Grand Challenge Program

The US Endowment for Forestry and Communities
January 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities has announced a new collaboration with the Georgia Institute of Technology to address the far-reaching social, economic and environmental impacts of pulp and paper mill closures across the United States, particularly in the rural South, where these mills have long served as economic anchors. The Endowment and Georgia Tech are developing an integrated decision-making dashboard to help policymakers, community leaders and industry stakeholders quantify the effects of mill closures and identify data-driven pathways to offset them through the sustainable use of forestry residues… Over the past decade, nearly 50 paper mills have shut down nationwide … resulting in the loss of thousands of jobs and disrupted local supply chains that once connected family forest owners, loggers, sawmills and manufacturers… As markets for timber and forestry byproducts contract, landowners face reduced incentives for active management – conditions that can increase the risk of wildfire, invasive species and forest conversion to other uses.

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Arcadia Paper Mills to open plant in St. Helens, Oregon

By Kaelyn Cassidy
Your Oregon News
January 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — Nearly two years after beginning negotiations, St. Helens has finally sold the former Cascade Tissues site to Arcadia Paper Mills. The sale closed at the end of December, paving the way for Arcadia to set up shop at the former site of Boise White Paper and, later, Cascade Tissues. Arcadia purchased the site for $7.5 million. …An opening date for the new mill has not been announced, but it will make paper towels and napkins. So far, 15 employees have been hired to repair and commission the mill infrastructure. “Arcadia Paper Mills’ investment will bring family-wage manufacturing jobs back to St. Helens,” said City Administrator John Walsh. …St. Helens purchased the 204-acre site where Boise White Paper formerly operated in 2015 for $3 million. Cascade Tissues operated on a portion of that site until it closed in 2023, and St. Helens has since sought a new business to fill that spot.

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Annandale Millwork and Allied Systems Corporation announce expansion in Newport News

Governor of Virginia
January 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

Glenn Youngkin

RICHMOND, VA — Governor Glenn Youngkin announced that Annandale Millwork and Allied Systems Corporation and Frogale Lumber Supply, a family-owned manufacturer of structural building components and millwork, will invest $11.5 million to expand operations in Newport News, VA. This expansion is expected to create 154 new jobs and includes a commitment to purchase more than $6 million in Virginia-grown forest products over the next three years. …The new Newport News facility will manufacture roof trusses, floor trusses, prefabricated structural wall panels, and custom and stock millwork, including interior and exterior doors, to support residential and commercial construction projects. The Newport News location represents the company’s third major manufacturing facility, further expanding its production capacity and geographic reach. Annandale Millwork and Allied Systems Corporation will maintain its headquarters and existing operations in Winchester, Virginia, and additional operations in New Jersey, continuing to serve builders across Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, and Washington, D.C.

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Finance & Economics

Construction activity in U.S. and Canada waiting in the wings

By Alex Carrick
The Daily Commercial News
January 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

There are solid reasons to expect near-term strength in the US and Canadian construction markets. In the US, rapid technological progress and supportive federal policies are driving major investments in semiconductor fabrication, AI-related data centers, and energy infrastructure, with growing momentum toward nuclear power. In Canada, federal and provincial governments are promoting “nation-building” projects that emphasize LNG export capacity, port expansions, and new mines for critical minerals required by the digital economy. Both nations recognize that housing supply must rise substantially to meet population needs, signaling a long-term boost in residential construction. Yet, 2025 proved disappointing for overall construction performance, especially in employment. …Housing activity revealed a sharper divide between the two nations. U.S. housing starts in November 2025 dropped to an annualized 1.246 million units, the lowest since the pandemic. Most analysts believe the country needs at least 1.5 million starts per year to meet demand. 

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Raymond James upgrades shares of West Fraser, Canfor and Interfor as lumber conditions begin to improve

By Carl Surran
Seeking Alpha
January 14, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

West Fraser Timber was +3.9% in Wednesday’s trading as Raymond James upgraded shares to Outperform from Market Perform with a $75 price target, bumped up from $70, as Canadian lumber producers are set up for a stronger 2026 after many names are trading at or near all-time-low valuations. Raymond James analyst Daryl Swetlishoff said 2025 marked the trough of a four-year downturn in forest products, but the risk-reward has shifted to the upside with valuations at historic lows and supply tightening due to mill curtailments, restricted Canadian harvesting and limited US imports. Potential U.S. housing policy changes ahead also could improve affordability and lift lumber demand, and depressed share prices may encourage consolidation in the industry as cash-rich buyers look for deals, Swetlishoff said. Against such a backdrop, Swetlishoff also upgraded Canfor and Interfor to Strong Buy from Outperform.

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Lumber Futures Rebounds From September Lows

Trading Economics
January 9, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures rose toward $535 per thousand board feet, rebounding from the September low of $528 reached on January 7th after a low liquidity holiday sell off unwound, improving seasonal demand expectations and longer term supply tightening. Renewed engagement from market participants, signaled that forced selling and the thin trading conditions that pushed prices to multi month lows have faded. Seasonal demand expectations have strengthened as builders begin positioning ahead of the spring construction period, when consumption typically improves following year end destocking. Industry forecasts point to a modest pickup in US housing starts and repair and remodel activity in 2026 as interest rates ease and trade uncertainty recedes, supporting demand after a weak finish to 2025. At the same time, longer term supply growth remains constrained by ongoing tariffs on Canadian softwood and slower capacity expansion across North American sawmills, limiting surplus.

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US Remodeling Market Sentiment Strengthens in Fourth Quarter of 2025

By Eric Lynch
NAHB Eye on Housing
January 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

In the third quarter of 2025, the NAHB remodeling index (RMI) posted a reading of 64, increasing four points compared to the previous quarter. Most remodelers are finding reasonably strong market conditions, even with the normal seasonal slowdown during the holidays. The major headwinds the industry is experiencing continue to be rising costs and potential customers hesitating due to policy and economic uncertainty. Demand for remodeling is being supported by an aging housing stock, strong homeowner equity and increasing need for aging-in-place improvements. …In the fourth quarter of 2025, the Current Conditions Index averaged 71, increasing three points from the previous quarter. …The Future Indicators Index averaged 56, up four points from the previous quarter.  

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Building Material Price Growth Remains Elevated in November

By Jesse Wade
NAHB Eye on Housing
January 14, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Residential building material prices continued to experience elevated growth, according to the latest Producer Price Index release from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Price growth has been above 3.0% since June this year, despite continued weakness in the new residential construction market. Across building materials, metal products continue to experience price increases, while ready-mix concrete and softwood lumber have experienced price declines over the past year. The Producer Price Index for final demand increased 0.2% in November, after rising 0.1% in October. …The price index for inputs to new residential construction rose 0.1% in November and was up 4.2% from last year. The price of goods used in new residential construction was up 0.4% over the month and 3.4% from last year. Meanwhile, the price for services was down 0.4% over the month and up 5.5% from last year. 

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Dow futures fall 300 points as Trump’s DOJ opens criminal investigation into Fed Chair Powell

CNCB
January 12, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Jerome Powell

Stock futures fell Monday after the Department of Justice opened a criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, an apparent escalation by President Trump in his attempt to pressure the central bank. …Trump’s call to cap credit card rates for one year at 10% was also causing some market indigestion. …Powell confirmed in an unusual direct video statement Sunday evening that federal prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation related to his Senate Banking Committee testimony. Powell said the investigation was another attempt by Trump to influence the central bank’s monetary policy and he would not bow to the pressure. His term as chair is up in May. “This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions, or whether instead, monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation,” said Powell in the statement.

In related coverage: 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

A Year in Review: 10 Stories About How the Softwood Lumber Board Is Shaping Lumber’s Future

The Softwood Lumber Board
January 15, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Happy 2026 to our investors, colleagues, and industry partners. As we reflect on the successes achieved in 2025, we’re sharing a concise recap of the year’s most impactful SLB stories—from market expansion and code wins to education and workforce development. Each reflects our shared commitment to growing demand for softwood lumber through coordinated, industry-led strategy.

  1. The SLB’s Strategy for 2.9 Billion Board Feet of New Annual Lumber Demand
  2. The SLB and USDA Forest Service Expand Accelerator Cities Program 
  3. Four Winners in the 2025 Mass Timber Competition: Building Sustainable Schools
  4. The Future Is Under Construction. And It’s Framed with Wood.
  5. WoodWorks Accelerates Wood Use in Data Centers and Warehouses 
  6. SLB Programs Are Critical for the Lumber Industry’s Continuing Growth
  7. SLB Wood Education Roundtable Charts Path for Architecture Curricula
  8. WoodWorks Supports Growth in Student Housing Projects
  9. The AWC secured key victories in the 2027 I-Code Hearings
  10. New Attainable Housing LookBook Supports Lumber Market Growth in Key Segment

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Trex launches Refuge ignition-resistant decking

By Trex Company
LBM Journal
January 14, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Trex Company has announced the limited launch of Trex Refuge Decking—an ignition-resistant PVC decking line performance-engineered for use in select regions with heightened fire-safety requirements. Designed to meet stringent building codes while maintaining aesthetics, the new cellular PVC offering combines advanced fire performance with the thoughtful design, durability and low-maintenance benefits that are hallmarks of the Trex brand. Third-party tested to the industry’s most rigorous standards, Trex Refuge decking resists ignition and slows flame spread, outperforming traditional wood decking (Pressure treated lumber, cedar and redwood that is not treated with optional fire-retardant chemicals). The line meets ASTM E84 Class A Flame Spread requirements and complies with IWUIC ASTM E2768 Ignition Resistance Standards, making it approved for installation in fire-prone and Wildland-Urban Interface-protected areas (WUI) (Subject to local codes; consult with your builder/inspector).

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Waldo County Company that Makes Lincoln Logs is Closing

By Annie Rupertus
Bangor Daily News in Midcoast Villager
January 15, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US East

A wood products manufacturer in Burnham is set to shut down April 14, according to a spokesperson. Pride Manufacturing Co. is the world’s largest manufacturer of golf tees and cigar tips, according to the website for its parent company, Tennessee-based PrideSports. It also started making Lincoln Logs, the classic wooden building toy, in 2014. The shutdown comes at a time when forest industry employment in the state is on the decline, despite a rise in wood product manufacturing sales. The Waldo County manufacturer employs 115 people, according to Peter Bennett, a lawyer representing the company. …The company was founded in Florida in 1930 before moving to Maine in 1956 to be closer to the wood it used to produce cigar tips, and it started making golf tees soon after.

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Martin Hopp Architect completes a mass timber K-12 school building “designed to be a teacher in itself” on Long Island

By Daniel Jonas Roche
The Architect’s Newspaper
January 14, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US East

©Martin Hopp Architect

Evergreen Charter School, a new mass timber K-12 educational building designed by Martin Hopp Architect (MHA), is now complete on Long Island. The New York City–based studio designed the school in Hempstead, New York, with Gil Bernardino and Dr. Sarah Brewster, Evergreen Charter School’s founders. The building incorporates mass timber, solar shading, native plant species, and other strategies. Wood fins regulate natural light access, and denote a signature architectural feature. Its embodied carbon measures 330 kgCO2e/m2 and its energy use intensity is 173 kWh/m2—a 24 percent improvement over baseline compared to buildings with similar footprints and programming, MHA stated. …The architect said in a statement the building is “designed to be a teacher in itself.” Signage throughout the school conveys for students how employing mass timber, solar shading, and native plant species can reduce carbon impact. This signage is augmented by murals and “info-stations” about the importance of sustainability.

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Forestry

Explore the 2025 Sustainable Forestry Initiative’s Progress Report

By Kathy Abusow, President and CEO
Sustainable Forestry Initiative
January 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

The Sustainable Forestry Initiative is happy to start the year by sharing our 2025 SFI Progress Report, highlighting our collective achievements over the past year. We invite you to download and share the report with your colleagues.  We are also excited to host the 2026 SFI Annual Conference from May 5-7, 2026 in Montréal, Quebec. The conference will be a great event to connect with forest sector professionals and leaders, learn, and engage in important discussions. I hope to see you there! Additionally, Project Learning Tree will be celebrating 50 years of programming at the 2026 PLT Annual Conference in Nebraska from March 23-26, 2026. Consider making a donation to the PLT 50th anniversary campaign to help plant the seeds for the next 50 years. Finally, we have also released the 2025 PLT Canada Annual Report, demonstrating our environmental education and career pathways work across Canada. I encourage you to take a look at the impact PLT Canada has made and share it with your network.

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Interior launches consolidated U.S. Wildland Fire Service

By Brad Carlson
The Capital Press
January 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Doug Burgum

U.S. Department of the Interior Secretary Doug Burgum on Jan. 12 signed an order establishing the U.S. Wildland Fire Service, a unification of programs previously part of six DOI agencies and offices. The effort, which carries out provisions of President Donald Trump’s June 12 Empowering Commonsense Wildfire Prevention and Response executive order, will allow the department to “better respond to the increasing risks that wildland fire presents to people, property and infrastructure as well as the hazards faced by firefighters every day,” according to Burgum’s order… It appears the new agency is suppression-focused, Steve Ellis, who chairs the National Association of Forest Service Retirees, told Capital Press. …“While consolidating agencies might appear to be more efficient for fixing the catastrophic wildfire problem, successful wildland fire management involves much more than suppression,” he said. “The critical linkage between fire suppression and land management, including fuels reduction and prescribed fire, must be maintained.”

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Ruling Shows Court’s Eagerness to Scrutinize Trump Logging Plans

By Bobby Magill
Bloomberg Law
January 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A recent federal court ruling tossing out a streamlined environmental review for three Oregon timber projects will point the way for conservation groups to challenge the Trump administration’s nationwide logging agenda, natural resources attorneys say. Judge Michael McShane of the US District Court for the District of Oregon in his Jan. 13 ruling set aside a categorical exclusion under the National Environmental Policy Act called “CE-6.” The 1992 exclusion allowed for quick approval of logging projects designed to thin forests to reduce wildfire hazards. Fast-tracking an expansion of logging on federal land is among President Donald Trump’s top priorities in order to cut lumber imports and grow domestic timber industry jobs. The administration is loosening public notice and environmental review requirements for logging and other projects under NEPA, and it’s rolling back protections for roadless areas in national forests in order to open them to possible logging projects.

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How sales tax revenue from outdoor gear might become the next funding stream for wildfire prevention

By Brad Turner
KUNC News
January 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Could money from sales of skis, snowboards and other sporting goods be used to help protect Colorado communities from increasingly devastating wildfires? It’s an idea proposed by several conservation groups that could go before voters later this year. Colorado law requires that most state tax revenue in Colorado be refunded when the state runs a surplus. But a new proposal calls for the state to keep the surplus money collected from outdoor gear sales, and to use it to fund wildfire prevention and watershed conservation efforts. Supporters say as wildfire seasons in Colorado grow longer and more destructive, it’s crucial to find new money for prevention – especially when federal funding hinges on shifting priorities in Washington.

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Forest Service proposes logging next to Glacier National Park

By Kylie Mohr
SF Gate
January 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A major logging project has been proposed on the southern border of Glacier National Park, prompting concern from conservationists… “This is the heart of some of our wildest, most intact landscapes left in the U.S., anywhere south of Alaska,” said Peter Metcalf, the executive director of the Glacier-Two Medicine Alliance, a conservation organization in East Glacier Park, Montana. “We are really concerned that this kind of logging proposal would be slated for this landscape.” U.S. Forest Service district ranger Robert Davies said he plans to use the emergency authority authorized by an April 2025 executive order to expedite the project. The order calls for increasing timber production and reducing wildfire risk in areas of national forest considered to have very high or high wildfire risk. Roughly half the proposed project qualifies, but the entire project is subject to the streamlined timeline, which cuts out the majority of opportunities for public participation.

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Gophers Dropped On Mount St Helens For One Day In 1982 Left An Astonishing Impact 40 Years Later

By James Felton
IFL Science
January 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

In 1980, Washington State’s Mount St Helens erupted…causing an ecological nightmare as the volcano spewed lava, ash, and debris over the surrounding landscape that was followed by mudflows and pyroclastic flows, leaving the vegetation covered in mud and detritus as far as 27 kilometers from the volcano. …But one team of scientists had an unconventional idea to help jumpstart the process: send a few gophers on a one-day mission to the mountain. “Gophers are known as ‘hole diggers’,” says a 2024 paper assessing the long-term effects of the rodents at Mount St Helens, adding, “a single gopher can move 227 kg [500 pounds] of soil per month”. Digging is a useful quality in restoring an area devastated by volcanic eruption. Plant life was struggling to return… But while the top layers of soil were destroyed by the eruption and lava flows, the soil underneath could still have been rich in bacteria and fungi.

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Judge strikes down Forest Service logging loophole

By Monique Merrill
Courthouse News Service
January 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

PORTLAND, Ore. — In a win for conservation groups, a federal judge blocked the U.S. Forest Service from relying on a decades-old exemption to approve large logging projects without environmental review. A trio of environmental groups — Oregon Wild, WildEarth Guardians and GO Alliance —  sued the Forest Service in 2022, accusing it of failing to determine whether applying categorical exclusion 6 — an exemption meant for small, low-impact activities intended to reduce fire hazard, also known as CE-6 — to approve three large-scale commercial thinning projects would have no significant impact. U.S. District Judge Michael McShane initially found the claim to be time-barred, but the Ninth Circuit disagreed and sent the challenge back to the lower court. The conservation groups described the application of the exclusion as a “bureaucratic loophole” that authorizes massive commercial logging projects and sidesteps environmental analysis and public comment. McShane agreed, vacating the exclusion in a ruling released late Tuesday. 

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Western Washington Forest Health Strategic Plan

Washington State Department of Natural Resources
January 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Western Washington forests are vital to the identity, economy, and quality of life vital to the region. From the Puget Sound to the Olympic Peninsula and Columbia Gorge, healthy forests provide clean air and water, sustain fish and wildlife habitat, store carbon, and support local jobs in forestry, recreation, and tourism. …The Western Washington Forest Health Strategic Plan is the result of an holistic and collaborative effort by the Washington State Department of Natural Resources to bring partners representing all lands and stakeholder groups together to identify priorities and strategies for how to steward and manage western Washington forests at a landscape scale. This plan builds on lessons learned from the development and implementation of the 20-Year Forest Health Strategic Plan: Eastern Washington.

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USDA Forest Service begins 10-year partnership with $7.3M dollar investment to reduce wildfire risk

By Forest Service
US Department of Agriculture
January 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

PUEBLO, Colo. — The Pike-San Isabel National Forests & Cimarron and Comanche National Grasslands began a 10-year partnership and $7.3 million investment to implement forest health treatments as part of the War Department’s Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration (REPI) program. The partners will use $3 million in REPI funds, along with $4.3 million in partner contributions, to treat 2,000 acres of National Forest System land and nonfederal lands near the U.S. Air Force Academy and Cheyenne Mountain Space Force Station. The REPI program preserves military missions by avoiding land use conflicts near military installations, addressing environmental restrictions that limit military activities and increasing military installation resilience. 

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Increased deciduous tree dominance reduces wildfire carbon losses in boreal forests

By University of Northern Arizona
Phys.Org
January 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

As climate change drives more frequent and severe wildfires across boreal forests in Alaska and northwestern Canada, scientists are asking a critical question: Will these ecosystems continue to store carbon or become a growing source of carbon emissions? New research published shows that when forests shift from coniferous—consisting mostly of pines, spruces and larches—to deciduous—consisting mostly of birches and aspens—they could release substantially less carbon when they burn. The study, led by researchers from the Center for Ecosystem Science and Society (ECOSS) at Northern Arizona University and published in Nature Climate Change, found that boreal forests dominated by deciduous species lose less than half as much carbon per unit area burned compared to historically dominant black spruce forests. Even under severe fire weather conditions, carbon losses in deciduous stands were consistently lower than those in conifer forests.

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Viewpoint: Be leery of ‘multiple use’ talk on wilderness

By Bill Schneider, retired publisher & outdoor writer
Missoula Current
January 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…Instead of celebrating our good fortune to have a small part of our state still wild and undeveloped, our political leaders want to develop the last of wild Montana when they should be working to protect it, which is what most Montanans favor. ….In the common vernacular, especially among those who favor commercial uses of public lands, “multiple use” means development instead of protection. What they really mean when then say is “logging use” or “commercial use” or “motorized recreation use” or in some cases, “single use.” …The words, “multiple use” have been marginalized into a political catch phrase. Instead of saying they favor “multiple use” instead of Wilderness, politicos should be honest and say they want commercial use of public lands and stop trying to fool us by supporting “multiple use” because it sounds like support for the majority while hiding the true intent.

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Preserve forests; demand the ‘Roadless Rule’ remains intact

By Neil Lawrence, WildEarth Guardians
The Seattle Times
January 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE — Twenty-five years ago, I stood in a snowy National Arboretum in Washington, DC, shaking hands with President Bill Clinton at the signing ceremony for the most important forest conservation mandate in our country’s history.  But now that landmark law, which went into effect on Jan. 12, 2001, is hanging by a thread, marked for repeal by the Trump administration — even though 99% of citizen input opposes the idea. The “Roadless Rule” was adopted to curtail harmful logging and industrial roadbuilding across 58 million undeveloped acres of our national forests. More than 2 million acres of those wild lands are in Washington, helping keep this the Evergreen State. …Trump officials claim that opening these areas to bulldozers and chain saws will protect communities from wildfire. But that’s a story that just doesn’t wash.  [to access the full story a Seattle Times subscription is required]

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Utah State University researchers predict 60% wildfire increase in Utah forests by 2050

By MJ Jewkes
ABC 4
January 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SALT LAKE CITY — Scientists at Utah State University have identified a simple metric that could be used to measure and predict wildfire vulnerability. The study examined all wildfires in Utah between 1984 and 2021. Coupled with daily weather data, USU researchers were able to find a simple, yet reliable, predictor for the occurrence of wildfires. “By simplifying it to bare bones, we hope to make patterns easier to track, understand and act on,” Jim Lutz, a researcher with USU, said. According to the study, researchers compared “hot days,” when temperatures topped 80 degrees with almost 1,500 wildfires. The data led scientists to believe that hot days are a primary driver for how quickly dead logs, and other fuels, dry out. “Fire ecology is more complicated than daily weather, of course,” a USU press release said. “Fire patterns are influenced by drought, forest health and snowpack.”

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California strengthens wildfire response with new agreement

By Alejandro Mejia
Action News Now
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

VALLEJO, Calif. The USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region and CAL FIRE have renewed their commitment to battling wildfires across California. This renewal extends the California Fire Master Agreement for another five years. The agreement, signed by Pacific Southwest interim Regional Forester Jacque Buchanan and CAL FIRE Chief Joe Tyler on Dec. 12, allows for a cooperative approach to wildfire response. According to the USDA Forest Service, this collaboration enables firefighters to share resources and respond across jurisdictional lines during emergencies. “This complex operating environment within California and the challenges we face year-round require this collaborative approach,” Jaime Gamboa, fire director for the Forest Service’s Pacific Southwest Region, said. The agreement emphasizes a united front in wildfire emergencies, prioritizing the closest available resources to protect lives and property. It also covers hazardous fuels reduction and streamlines training and equipment sharing.

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In new deal with feds, Utah gets ‘a seat at the table’ in managing national forest land

By Annie Knox
Utah News Dispatch
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Spencer Cox & Tom Schultz

Utah has had more than 7 million acres of national forest for over a century but not the say it wanted in managing them. That changed Thursday morning when the state finalized a new agreement with the U.S. Forest Service, intended in part to expand logging. “This is something we’ve been working for — wanting — literally, for generations in our state,” Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said at the state Capitol before signing the document. “And now the moment is here where we can be involved on the front end of these decisions.” Utah is the third state to formalize such an agreement with the Forest Service this year, following Idaho and Montana. The compacts come after President Donald Trump directed federal agencies in March to speed approval of logging projects and set goals for timber sales, calling it a way to reduce wildfire risk. 

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Federal lawmakers try to protect Virginia forests as Trump administration moves to repeal Roadless Rule

By Shannon Heckt
The Virginia Mercury
January 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

President Donald Trump’s administration has set in motion efforts to repeal the Roadless Rule, a 2001 administrative mandate that put 45 million acres of the least developed forest land under protection from logging and construction of roads. As the nation observes the rule’s 25th anniversary, Virginia’s federal lawmakers and advocates are calling for its preservation and say hundreds of thousands of acres of forests could be at stake if it is axed. The federal government has framed the proposed repeal as necessary for forest management against wildfires. …Environmental advocates have said since last summer that repealing the rule will lead to land degradation, sediment pollution, and create risks to clean water sources. It would also open up large swaths of the 400,000 acres of the protected forestland in Virginia to logging and potential new roads.

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Eric Taylor awarded Texas A&M Vice Chancellor’s Award

Texas A&M Forest Service – Texas A&M University
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Eric Taylor, Ph.D., Texas A&M Forest Service Silviculturist, was presented the Public Service in Forestry Award by Texas A&M University Vice Chancellor Dr. Jeffrey Savell, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2025. Throughout his career, Taylor has embodied both Texas A&M AgriLife’s and Texas A&M Forest Service’s missions by serving landowners, educating future professions, advancing innovative silvicultural strategies and fostering collaborations that strengthen forestry in Texas and the Southern U.S. “Taylor shows exceptional leadership skills in forestry that result in strong partnerships and outcomes for Texas and throughout the south,” said Al Davis, Texas A&M Forest Service Director. “He also consistently provides exceptional service to landowners, especially those with smaller properties who often struggle to access forest management services.”

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Representatives weigh promise, value of forests in move to restrict carbon programs

By Molly Rains
New Hampshire Bulletin
January 16, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

New Hampshire and its counties may soon be barred from enrolling publicly owned lands in carbon sequestration programs. “We don’t see sequestration as a traditional use,” said Rep. Mike Ouellet, a Colebrook Republican, at a hearing before the House Committee on Municipal and County Government on Tuesday. The committee later voted, 13-1, to recommend passage of House Bill 1205, which would prohibit “carbon sequestration projects” on state- and county-owned lands. …No county- or state-owned land is currently listed on the registry of New Hampshire carbon sequestration projects. But the long duration of forest carbon contracts and the possibility they would impose restrictions on land use were two reasons bill proponents cited for preventing them on public lands in the future. …Others said timber harvest could be an important source of revenue for counties and the state, and worried the contracts would have a negative impact on the timber industry.

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