Region Archives: US West

Business & Politics

Chinook Forest Partners to Acquire South Coast Lumber Company

South Coast Lumber Co.
November 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

GRANTS PASS and BROOKINGS, Oregon — Chinook Forest Partners, a forestland investment manager located in Southwest Oregon, announced it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire South Coast Lumber Co. and affiliates. This acquisition encompasses 104,000 acres of premium coastal forest with modern manufacturing facilities. …Mike Beckley, CEO and President of South Coast said, “We are confident they will honor the legacy the Fallert family has built over four generations, while helping South Coast reach new levels of growth and opportunity.” …The transaction is expected to finalize before year-end 2025, pending customary closing conditions.

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Finance & Economics

PotlatchDeltic’s Merger With Rayonier to Dilute Benefit From Canadian Lumber Duties, US Tariffs. RBC Says

Fidelity.com
November 10, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

PotlatchDeltic is set to benefit from rising softwood lumber duties on Canadian lumber and US tariffs on imports from all countries, but its pending merger with Rayonier will dilute the impact, RBC Capital Markets analysts said in a Monday note. “We expect some straightforward benefits of scale as the company comes together with Rayonier, although we think it will take some time for an inflection in timber demand to play out,” analysts said. Despite some potential headwinds on loss of incentives, the company expects to increase its solar development land area to 40,000 to 45,000 acres by the end of the year, analysts said. …RBC is positive on the company’s ramp-up at the Waldo sawmill and thinks its lumber business is running well, but noted that a soft commodity backdrop has been unsupportive. RBC downgraded the stock’s rating to sector perform from outperform.

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PotlatchDeltic reports Q3, 2025 net income of $26 million

PotlatchDeltic Corporation
November 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

SPOKANE, Washington — PotlatchDeltic reported net income of $25.9 million on revenues of $314.2 million for the quarter ended September 30, 2025. Excluding after-tax special items, including merger-related expenses, adjusted net income was $27.8 million for the third quarter of 2025. Net income was $3.3 million on revenues of $255.1 million for the quarter ended September 30, 2024. …”We are pleased with the strong operational performance across all business segments during the third quarter,” said Eric Cremers, CEO. “Our Wood Products segment delivered disciplined cost management, positioning the division to capitalize when market conditions improve. Looking ahead, we remain focused on completing the pending merger with Rayonier – a transformative transaction expected to close in late first quarter or early second quarter 2026. 

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Boise Cascade reports Q3, 2025 net income of $21.8 million

By Boise Cascade Corporation
Businesswire
November 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

BOISE, Idaho — Boise Cascade reported net income of $21.8 million on sales of $1.7 billion for the third quarter ended September 30, 2025, compared with net income of $91.0 million on sales of $1.7 billion for the third quarter ended September 30, 2024. “In the face of subdued demand and commodity pricing headwinds, we were able to post good earnings for the third quarter of 2025,” said Nate Jorgensen, CEO. …Wood Products’ segment loss was $12.1 million compared to segment income of $53.9 million for the three months ended September 30, 2024. The decrease in segment income was due to lower EWP and plywood sales prices and sales volumes, as well as higher per-unit conversion costs. …BMD segment income decreased $20.5 million to $54.3 million from $74.8 million for the three months ended September 30, 2024.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Utah law to impose fee on wildfire-prone homes

By Isabella Sosa
KSL News Radio
November 19, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

SALT LAKE CITY — Homeowners in high wildfire risk areas should soon expect home assessments and a new fee. HB48 Wildland Urban Interface Modifications requires the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands to draw a high wildfire risk boundary across the state. The division will inspect homes within the boundary for fire risk, and property owners will pay a fee based on their risk and square footage, which will cover the cost of the program and lot assessments. State Wildfire Risk Reductions Programs Manager Joseph Anderson said the assessments will focus on the vegetation surrounding the home and the materials used in the structure. “The goal is to remove any vegetation or anything that could catch an ember and allow that ember to burn and catch the structure on fire,” Anderson said. The bill comes after catastrophic wildfires across the West, like the California Eaton Fire from January 2025. 

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Fire Destroys Under-Construction Apartment Project in Utah

By Jim Parsons
ENR Mountain States
November 10, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah — Investigators are searching for the cause of a fire that engulfed an under-construction apartment project in Lehi, Utah, south of Salt Lake City. The 304-unit multi-family complex, called Alta Vista, broke ground earlier this year. …Flames at a four-story wood-framed building were first reported at 10:17 am Sunday, Nov. 9, by the project’s on-site security guard. The fire quickly spread to the rest of the building, most of which eventually collapsed, according to a statement from the city of Lehi. …A statement from Wood Partners read: “The project was under construction and did not have any residents. There were no fatalities in the fire…. We are working closely with local officials through the investigation, cleanup and recovery processes.” …Fire department officials say it may take several days before they can determine the blaze’s cause and point of origin.

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FABRIC Mass Timber planning California’s first large-scale mass timber factory in Redding

Action News Now
November 10, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

REDDING, Calif. – A groundbreaking effort is underway in Redding where FABRIC Mass Timber and WRNS Studio are working together to plan the state’s first large-scale mass timber factory. Officials say the innovative facility will transform wood removed from wildfire fuel into sustainable building materials. FABRIC’s mission is to use advanced technologies to create climate-positive materials while generating manufacturing jobs in Northern California. The 200,000-square-foot factory, designed by WRNS Studio, will serve as a hub for design consulting, engineering, and manufacturing. “We have a full ecosystem ready to change the way we build. An experienced team. Design and engineering support from inspiration to installation. Advanced manufacturing and fabrication facilities that produce CLT and GLT to exacting specifications. Supply chain tracing to document sustainability and wildfire reduction efforts. Partnerships to train and develop a workforce that will frame new opportunities for our state,” said FABRIC Founder and CEO Scott Ehlert.

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Forestry

Private forestland owners will take the Washington state to court over new buffer rule

The Chronicle
December 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Washington Forest Protection Association (WFPA) announced last week that it would file litigation against Washington state. The lawsuit will challenge a new buffer rule by the Washington State Forest Practices Board. The new rule expands the required no-cut buffers around non-fish-bearing streams in the state, requiring forestland owners to leave more trees uncut. WFPA states that it believes the new rule is a result of the Washington state Department of Ecology “misinterpreting” a federal water temperature standard. The statement added that the financial cost of implementing the rule is so large that it “justifies a judicial review.” The group also painted the creation of the new rule as a break from the state’s tradition of collaboration with other stakeholders. …“The rule overreaches the law, ignores on-the-ground realities, adds costly and unnecessary regulations, and offers little to no benefit for salmon recovery.”

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Don’t trade salmon wealth for timber pennies

By Linda Behnken, Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association
The Anchorage Daily News
November 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

As the US Forest Service considers the future management of the Tongass National Forest, I hope that Alaska’s congressional delegation will listen to what Southeast Alaskans already know: Wild salmon are one of the Tongass’ most valuable resources. If we leave the trees standing and protect the habitat that fish need, the Tongass will continue to generate billions of dollars in natural dividends, in turn supporting thousands of fishing jobs and providing millions of pounds of nutritious seafood year after year. …For decades, Southeast Alaska’s communities and fishermen have fought industrial logging in the Tongass. …The harmful impacts of industrial logging on Southeast Alaska’s salmon watersheds and our natural dividends are not hypothetical. Protecting the Tongass is the most cost-effective way to improve ecosystem productivity and ensure the well-being for all who call Southeast home. 

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Logging project thins trees to create, enhance grizzly bear habitat

By Kevin Maki
NBC Montana
November 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

TROY, Montana — Vincent Logging, a family-owned logging company in Libby is working with Hecla Mining Company to manage its forested lands for wildlife habitat. It’s a 15-hundred acre research project to determine which management techniques provide the best habitat for endangered species. …It’s forest land in the Bull Lake area on Hecla Mining property near Troy. “We’re going to create grizzly bear habitat or enhance existing habitat for the bear,” he said. “Doing so, will enhance habitat for all the other critters that are living in here or that might live in here. We’re also studying it for success or failure at the same time.” Chas said thinning small diameter trees opens the area to create more plants that grizzlies like to eat. Larger diameter trees and thickets are left untouched to create a safe haven for the bears.

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Loggers scrambling to keep projects on track

By Peter Aleshire
Payson Roundup
November 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ARIZONA — For the first time in months, Forest Service timber managers last week attended a Natural Resources Working Group meeting on the continuing effort to restore Northern Arizona forests and protect communities including Payson, Show Low, Pinetop and Pine. Local officials and logging operators said they are still searching for ways to handle millions of tons of low-value brush, slash and small trees that crowd the region’s overgrown ponderosa pine forests. The group, formed through the Eastern Arizona Counties Organization, meets regularly with industry representatives and Forest Service staff. …The Four Forest Restoration Initiative (4FRI) completed about 18,000 acres of thinning in the past year. Mass layoffs and the shutdown limited collaboration and fieldwork. …Pascal Berlioux, executive director of the Eastern Arizona Counties Organization, said a major problem was reduced production at the Lignetics plant in Show Low, which normally buys large amounts of biomass for wood-pellet manufacturing.

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Alaska timber industry says it needs more supply to survive

By Larry Persily
The Wrangell Sentinel
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

It was no surprise that everyone on the timber panel at this month’s Alaska Resource Development Council conference had the same message: The industry needs a larger supply of trees to cut. And a steady, bankable supply, said Joe Young, of Tok, who started Young’s Timber in Alaska’s Interior more than 30 years ago. …The Nov. 13 industry panel at the annual conference held in Anchorage also talked about demand for their product and the challenges in meeting that demand. Juneau attorney Jim Clark, said the Trump administration’s move to rescind the Roadless Rule, which has been around since 2001, could help open areas of the Tongass National Forest to logging. …The lack of timber sales, financial pressures and opposition from conservation groups have knocked down Alaska timber industry jobs from almost 4,000 in 1990 to about 700 in 2015 and just 360 in 2024, according to Alaska Department of Labor statistics.

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Oregon senators push for wildfire disaster relief for Columbia Gorge Scenic Area

By Alex Baumhardt
The Oregonian
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USFS Flickr

Oregon’s U.S. senators are urging their peers on a powerful budgeting committee to send emergency funding to Oregon and other states where national lands and parks were recently burned by wildfires. More than a million acres of federal land burned across the West this summer, including thousands of acres of the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area straddling Oregon and Washington in the Rowena and Burdoin fires. While state, tribal and private lands are eligible for disaster aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, federal land managed by natural resource agencies are not. Officials at the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management have to seek congressional help to finance recovery efforts. In light of this, Oregon’s Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden joined eight other Democratic senators in writing Monday to the chairs of the Senate Appropriations Committee asking for federal funding. 

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Regional sawmills extend life of beetle-killed trees from Routt County

By Suzie Romig
Steamboat Pilot & Today
November 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Kremmling, Colorado — The Mill in Kremmling is contributing to the natural carbon-storing success of trees in Routt County by purchasing and reusing standing dead trees logged during wildfire mitigation projects and turned into usable wood products. The company’s goal is to support the local economy and Colorado’s timber industry by creating a demand for forest products sourced entirely from fire mitigation projects, said Lisa Hara, owner and CEO at The Mill. Some 90% of the trees processed at The Mill come from Routt County, with 10% from Jefferson County for Douglas fir wood, Hara said. “We help Routt County by creating a demand for materials that come directly from fire mitigation and watershed projects,” said Hara, who purchased The Mill in spring 2023. “Instead of being treated as waste, this wood becomes a resource, one that supports forest health and rural jobs at the same time.”

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Logging advocate works to lead contrasting groups for sustainable forests

By Kevin Maki
NBC Montana
November 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Bruce Vincent

The timber industry was a mainstay of western Montana’s economy for decades. But that economic force entered a sharp decline. Divisions between the industry and critics were especially rampant in the 1980’s and 90’s. But one of Montana’s most prominent logging activists is on a journey of collaboration. NBC Montana met Bruce Vincent in his hometown of Libby. …Bruce would become a hero to many in the logging industry. But for critics he was a lightning rod. He remembers what they called ‘the Timber Wars.’ …For a long time Bruce said he was in the fight. But he got tired of it. …Bruce said he was raised to be a steward of the forest. It’s that message that he has worked all these years to share. “We did a good job at fighting,” he said. “But we sucked at leading. We needed to learn how to lead this discussion on what we think forest sustainability could look like.”

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Lawsuit Seeks Final Protection for California Spotted Owls

The Center for Biological Diversity
November 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SAN FRANCISCO— The Center for Biological Diversity, represented by Earthjustice, sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today for failing to finalize Endangered Species Act protections for California spotted owls. “The survival of the California spotted owl hangs by a thread and they desperately need protections,” said Noah Greenwald, at the Center for Biological Diversity. …In February 2023 the agency proposed protecting spotted owls in southern California as endangered and those in the Sierra Nevada as threatened, starting the clock on a one-year deadline to finalize protections. Those decisions are now more than two years overdue. The Center and partners first petitioned to protect the owls 25 years ago. …The U.S. Forest Service and the timber industry have instituted some protections for the spotted owl’s habitat, but damaging clearcutting and salvage logging persist. Combined with the increased risk of severe fire, these practices are resulting in continued loss of habitat.

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$3.4 million in federal funds headed to La Pine for wildfire mitigation

By Michael Kohn
The Bend Bulletin
November 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Oregon — Deschutes County is preparing to deploy $3.4 million for wildfire mitigation projects to reduce the likelihood of catastrophic wildfire in La Pine. The money comes from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and is part of a $200 million funding package to assist fire-prone areas across the country. Work is expected to begin in the spring on a variety of projects ranging from fuels reduction to community education, according to Lauren Street, a natural resources specialist with Deschutes County. The project is expected to continue for five years. La Pine was one of 58 recipients nationwide to benefit from community wildfire defense grants. The grants are funded by the Biden-era bipartisan infrastructure law of 2021. Elsewhere in Oregon, the Sweet Home Fire and Ambulance District is set to receive $8.7 million, the largest grant for any project in the state.

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Prescribed burning helps store forest carbon in big, fire-resistant trees

By Scott Stephens
University of California Berkeley
November 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

After more than a century of fire suppression in California’s forests, mounting evidence shows that frequent fire — through practices like prescribed fire or Indigenous cultural burning — can improve forest health, increase biodiversity and reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire. But controlled fires can have downsides. In addition to being labor intensive and producing smoke that may harm neighboring communities, burning trees and vegetation releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, contributing to global warming. A new long-term study shows that, while prescribed burning may release carbon dioxide in the short term, the repeated use of controlled fire may boost a forest’s productivity, or carbon sequestration capacity, in the long term. …The findings provide useful insights for California policymakers and land managers seeking to reduce wildfire hazard while helping the state achieve its goal of net zero carbon pollution by 2045.

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Forest board’s poor decision is another hit to timber-reliant communities’ livelihood

By Joel McEntire, R-Cathiamet
The Chronicle
November 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Joel McEntire

The Washington Forest Practices Board’s recent approval of the rule requiring buffers along streams is another devastating hit to Washington’s rural timber-reliant counties, and one they cannot afford. It is an insult to our communities, their schools, libraries and hospitals, and to anyone whose livelihood is connected to sustainable forest management. …The laws of our forests, fish and streams have been under the Forests and Fish Law since 1999. …For more than 25 years, the Forests and Fish Law has guided responsible forest management across Washington state. …The board’s new rule has brought many in the original coalition out of the woodwork. They, along with many others, including legislators from both sides of the aisle, have let the board know the rule is greatly flawed and needs to go back through the adaptive process. …Keep in mind that Commissioner Dave Upthegrove announced that the state was putting aside 77,000 acres for conservation.

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Washington Forest Practices Board approves new rule restricting timber harvests

Everett Post
November 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The state Forest Practices Board has narrowly approved a controversial water buffer rule that has drawn criticism from forestry and farming advocates, as well as local counties that say their economies will be negatively impacted. In its 7-5 vote at its Wednesday meeting, the FPB approved the new buffer that expands riparian shade protections for perennial non-fish-bearing streams, a move forestry advocates have noted would remove 200,000 acres of private forestland from use without financial compensation. “To say that we’re disappointed is probably an understatement,” Executive Director of Washington Farm Forestry Association Elaine O’ Neil said during the public comment period of the FPB’s meeting, following the buffer rule vote. …While critics claim the rule doesn’t follow actual science, proponents of the new buffer argued that it will ensure that water temperatures will remain consistently cool as they shift other streams, where warmer temperatures can be harmful to aquatic animals.

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Washington forest board takes 200,000 acres out of production

By Don Jenkins
The Capital Press
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

OLYMPIA — The Washington Forest Practices Board took 200,000 acres of timberland out of production, voting 7-5 to require loggers to stay farther back from streams without fish. The close vote Nov. 12 capped a contentious debate over the environmental and economic consequences of widening and lengthening riparian buffers to shade streams. Forest landowners will lose $2.8 billion in harvestable timber because of the new buffers, according to a University of Washington analysis. Ten state representatives, five Democrats and five Republicans, questioned whether the board had thoroughly examined the social costs. And the Environmental Protection Agency said the bigger buffers are not needed to meet the Clean Water Act. But the Department of Ecology championed wider and longer buffers. The buffers will keep timber harvests from warming water temperatures in most cases, according to Ecology. “Not taking action is not an option,” said Ecology Director Casey Sixkiller, a member of the forest board.

Additional coverage in Cascadia Daily, by Julia Tellman: State narrowly approves new stream buffer rule for logging

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Oregon, Washington old growth forests could see ‘major’ changes, heat dome study finds

By Michaela Bourgeois
KOIN 6 News
November 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

PORTLAND, Ore. – A new study from researchers at Oregon State University is detailing the impacts the historic 2021 heat dome had on old growth forests in the Pacific Northwest, and how those areas could see “major” changes amid a warming climate. Over three days, the heat dome brought temperatures as high as 116 degrees Fahrenheit to Portland, 117 degrees to Salem and 121 in Lytton, British Columbia – marking the highest temperature ever recorded in Canada. Now, with help from satellite images, researchers from OSU and the United States Department of Forestry, learned that the heat dome scorched nearly 5% of forested area in western Oregon and western Washington, “turning foliage … red or orange, sometimes within a matter of hours,” the university explained. …damage to foliage can lead to … reduced photosynthesis and an increase in vulnerability to pests and disease. More frequent and severe weather events could bring changes to old growth forests, the scientists warn.

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On National Forests, Logging Projects Advance With Less Public Input

By Tristan Scott
The Flathead Beacon
November 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

On Oct. 17 … the Flathead National Forest’s district ranger in Swan Lake proposed an emergency logging and thinning project west of Blacktail Mountain called the West Truman Project. The project proposal … was published to the Flathead National Forest’s projects website, signaling a departure from the agency’s usual strategy of notifying members of the public about planning projects by email and issuing press releases. It also came with a caveat: The West Truman Project is being analyzed under the USDA’s newly established Emergency Action Determination and, as such, is exempt from the usual layers of permitting compliance — including public comment. …Keith Hammer, leader of the Swan View Coalition, said he wasn’t surprised to see the Flathead National Forest propose a logging project with the stated purpose of reducing wildfire risk; however, he was surprised by the covert way in which they proposed it.

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Gov. Gianforte Presents Annual Forest Products Award to Stoltze Lumber

By Gov. Greg Gianforte
State of Montana
October 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

COLUMBIA FALLS, Mont. – Governor Gianforte presented his annual Forest Products Award to the F.H. Stoltze Land & Lumber Company … in recognition of their commitment to active forest management and the production of Montana wood products. …The company practices active forest management, including sustainable harvest practices, stewardship of 40,000 acres of timberland, and operation of a biomass co-generation facility that powers up to 3,000 homes, exemplifying their dedication to Montana’s forests, economy, and rural communities. Stoltze is one of the few remaining fully integrated forest products companies left in the northwest, meaning they own and manage timberland and operate a sawmilling facility. The award recognizes an outstanding person or entity for their work to actively manage Montana forests, responsibly develop forested resources, and promote the use of Montana wood products.

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Oregon State University study: Wildfire risk may tank timberland value, lead to early harvests

By Kyle Odegard
Capital Press
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Rising wildfire risk in the Pacific Northwest combined with volatile timber pricing may lower forestland values by as much as 50% and persuade property owners to harvest Douglas fir trees much earlier than planned, according to a new analysis. The optimal age to harvest Douglas fir trees — absent fire risk — would be 65 years. The study, from Oregon State University researchers, suggests that harvesting trees at 24 years would make the most economic sense under the worst-case scenarios. “Basically, under high wildfire risk that rises with stand age, every year you wait to harvest you’re rolling the dice,” said Mindy Crandall, an associate professor in the OSU College of Forestry. Co-author Andres Susaeta, an OSU forestry assistant professor, said the study was a simulation, but researchers are confident in the direction of results.  Susaeta said earlier harvesting reduces both long-term timber revenue and impacts wood quality.

Additional coverage in Earth.com: Hidden pressure is pushing Douglas-fir harvests decades earlier

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Officials in Bend warn Trump’s policies could hinder wildfire prevention work

By Michael Kohn
The Bend Bulletin
November 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Policies by the Trump administration are putting communities at increased risk for wildfire because federal funding for fuels treatment work is becoming more difficult to obtain. That is the opinion of a group of policymakers and politicians who convened in Bend last week to discuss how best to manage local forests. Bend Mayor Melanie Kebler, Deschutes County Commissioner Phil Chang and State Senator Anthony Broadman — all Democrats — were among those in attendance… Members of the group said there is a lack of clarity over future treatments in the Deschutes National Forest following years of mitigation work that cleared the forest floor of fuels and thinned areas to prevent a fast-moving crown fire. …Chang said he is especially concerned with the Trump administration’s Fix our Forest Act … The bill relies mostly on logging and cattle grazing to clear fuels that cause catastrophic wildfire, but funding for prescribed burning isn’t part of the legislation. 

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Washington forestland owners in ‘most contentious’ battle in quarter century

By Don Jenkins
The Capital Press
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Washington Forest Practices Board may vote Nov. 12 to widen and lengthen riparian buffers, taking millions of dollars worth of timber out of production. Forest landowners and the wood-products are mounting a last-ditch effort to persuade the board to not adopt what they say would be a massive taking of private property. The state Department of Ecology says wider and longer buffers would keep timber harvests from raising temperatures in non-fish bearing streams in most cases. Timber groups haven’t been in a battle this divisive since the industry, state agencies and tribes settled on seminal logging rules in 1999, Washington Forest Protection Association’s Darin Cramer said. …Studies confirmed logging raises water temperatures. The timber industry argues that even if temperatures rise, they soon go down and generally do not exceed acceptable levels.  Massachusetts-based consultant Industrial Economics estimates the rule will take somewhere between 67,000 acres and 170,000 acres out of production.

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Landslides ‘are everywhere’ in Oregon and more unpredictable than earthquakes

By Miranda Cyr
The Register-Guard
November 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, US West

Every year, there are thousands of landslides in Oregon. Geologists say the number is increasing due to climate change. …Swaths of the Pacific Northwest are particularly prone, thanks to a combination of mountainous landscape and heavy rainfall. “Over the last couple decades, the landslides and the surface processes and surface hazards that I’ve been working on have become much more prominent, primarily due to climate change and humans inhabiting more areas in hazardous terrain,” said Josh Roering, a professor of earth sciences at the University of Oregon. …Roering is one of the geologists involved in the newly formed Center for Land Surface Hazards (CLaSH). A $15 million NSF grant jumpstarted the center that will study landslides and other surface hazards. While CLaSH is housed in the University of Michigan, it is a collaboration with more than a dozen academic, governmental and community partners across the country. 

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California forests have a labor crisis: Not enough people willing to climb trees

By Michelle Peng
The San Francisco Standard
November 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Miles Ryan checked his harness one last time, gave an assured look to his ground crew, and started to climb. …There, balanced at the top of the forest, Ryan leaned out toward the tips of the limbs to get what he’d come for: cones. It was one of Cal Fire’s last cone samplings of the season, which usually runs from August to October across state forests and conifer species. Each cone contains anywhere from a few dozen to hundreds of precious seeds. These have become more important in recent years, as an uptick in severe wildfires and the spread of insects and diseases have led to mass deaths of pines across California forests. But there are just a few dozen professional tree climbers like Ryan trained for high-elevation seed collection in California. …Cal Fire needs to collect 55,978 bushels of cones across species and locales to fully stock its seed bank.

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New Research Shows Redwoods Stand Strong Amid Wildfires—But Management Matters

Cal Poly Humboldt
November 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Cal Poly Humboldt study in partnership with Save the Redwoods League reveals how second-growth forests respond to modern wildfires and what managers can do to protect them. California’s coast redwoods have stood for centuries, weathering a changing climate, logging, and time itself. But in an era of hotter, more frequent wildfires, their future resilience depends on how we care for them, according to new research published in Forest Ecology and Management. The study sought to understand the effects of wildfire on coast redwoods—the tallest trees in the world. Results revealed that redwoods in second-growth forests largely survived extreme wildfires in 2020 and quickly resprouted from their trunks and bases. Researchers also discovered that forest structure—how dense the trees are and which species are present—strongly influences fire severity, highlighting the importance of management efforts such as thinning, reducing fuel loads, and encouraging fire-resistant species.

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Prescribed fire a focus as Fix Our Forests Act navigates Congress

By Jordan Hansen
Missoula Current
November 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A bipartisan piece of legislation that could have big impacts on the nation’s forest land continues to move quickly through Congress, pushing through a Senate committee last month. The Fix Our Forests Act was introduced in the U.S. Senate in April and co-sponsored by Sen. Tim Sheehy, along with Senators from California, Utah and Colorado. The legislation seeks to promote prescribed burns, expand the state-federal Good Neighbor Authority program, increase collaboration among fire agencies and improve reforestation efforts after fires. It also makes some rule changes that could impact how areas designated as high fire danger are managed and how projects in those areas proceed. …The legislation has received some support from environmental and outdoor advocacy groups… But there has also been some concern with it, namely around how it could change the process of forest projects, especially those in a declared “emergency fireshed management” area.

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New data shows decline in wildfire mitigation efforts amid federal cuts

By Mike Bolger
KOAT Action News 7
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Albuquerque, NM — A new report by Grassroots Wildland Firefighters reveals a troubling decline in wildfire prevention work across the nation. According to the report, hazardous fuel reduction efforts on U.S. Forest Service land are down 38% since January 2025 compared to recent years, following significant federal budget cuts to staffing and resources. Hazardous fuel treatments are critical in preventing catastrophic wildfires. These projects include thinning overgrown forests, clearing brush, and conducting prescribed burns to reduce the vegetation that feeds wildfires. The group’s findings directly contradict recent public assurances from administration officials that land management agencies remain adequately funded and staffed. …The analysis shows mitigation work has fallen especially low in Idaho and Montana, where fewer than 30% of acres have been treated this year compared to previous averages. …Grassroots Wildland Firefighters warn that unless funding is restored, the nation’s wildfire season will grow increasingly severe and dangerous in the years ahead.

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Wildfire risk making timberland less valuable, long harvest rotations less feasible

By Steve Lundeberg
Oregon State University
November 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CORVALLIS, Oregon – Rising wildfire risk in the Pacific Northwest combined with notoriously volatile timber pricing may lower forestland values by as much as 50% and persuade plantation owners to harvest trees much earlier than planned, a new analysis of Douglas-fir forests shows. Under the worst-case scenarios, modeling by researchers at Oregon State University suggests harvesting trees at 24 years would make the most economic sense. Absent wildfire risk, the optimal age would be 65 years. Generally, private landowners harvest between those two ages, but it’s not a surprise for the optimal rotation age to go down in these scenarios, the scientists say. “Basically, under high wildfire risk that rises with stand age, every year you wait to harvest you’re rolling the dice,” said Mindy Crandall, at OSU College of Forestry. Earlier harvesting reduces both long-term timber revenue and carbon storage potential, as well as impacting wood quality, adds study co-author Andres Susaeta.

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Repeal of roadless rule could mean return of timber wars

By Jason Kauffman
Columbia Insight
November 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

BOISI, Idaho — The Trump Administration’s decision earlier this year to do away with the 2001 Roadless Area Conseravtion Rule on national forest lands sent shockwaves through environmental and outdoor recreation communities. According to environmentalists and an Idaho public official who has been involved in roadless rule politics since the issue’s inception, the move could transport stakeholders in the Pacific Northwest back to the rancor and political divisions of the timber war years. …“The national rule itself put the whole timber wars to bed. It really did,” said James Caswell, former director of the Bureau of Land Management. …The rule led to conditions in which environmentalists became less combative about forest management, according to Caswell. Instead, enviros became more willing to work with timber industry and Forest Service officials. …The decision puts the forest objectives of fishermen, hunters, ATVers, bird watchers and others on the back burner.

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Oregon forest coalition fights to revive logging antitrust lawsuit

By Monique Merrill
Courthouse News Service
November 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND, Oregon — The question of whether two logging companies conspired to monopolize markets in an eastern Oregon forest came before a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit on Wednesday as a coalition urged the court to revive its antitrust challenge. US Circuit Judge Milan Smith noted the case was unlike other antitrust suits. …In 2013, the U.S. Forest Service granted the logging company Iron Triangle a 10-year stewardship contract for the Malheur National Forest, as well as associated logging rights. A group of landowners, loggers and an eastern Oregon lumber sawmill — known collectively as the Malheur Forest Coalition — sued Iron Triangle in 2022, arguing that the company exploited control of the contract and should be blocked from competing for harvest rights in U.S. Forest Service public auctions. The lower court denied the request, prompting a new complaint adding the Malheur Lumber Company as a defendant.

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Drink Beer, Save Forest Park’s Northern Red-Legged Frogs

By Rachel Saslow
Willamette Week
November 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Ferment Brewing’s latest seasonal release is hoppy in more ways than one. The brewery has released Red Legged Ale, a seasonal hoppy red ale, in honor of the Northern red-legged frogs in Forest Park. Proceeds from the beer go to Oregon Wildlife Foundation’s efforts to protect the amphibian as it migrates between Forest Park and nearby wetlands to breed. …This journey has gotten much more difficult, as the froggies now need to descend a hill near Linnton and cross five lanes of Highway 30 traffic, a set of railroad tracks, and Marina Drive. They then have to repeat this process to get home. Volunteers have been helping the frogs cross Highway 30 since 2014 in what’s known as the Harborton Frog Shuttle. OWF is now trying to change the infrastructure itself and build an undercrossing near Linnton, allowing safe passage for frogs and other small animals.

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Study paints detailed picture of forest canopy damage caused by ‘heat dome’

By Oregon State University
EurekAlert
November 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CORVALLIS, Ore. – A satellite imagery analysis shows that the 2021 “heat dome” scorched almost 5% of the forested area in western Oregon and western Washington, turning foliage in canopies from a healthy green to red or orange, sometimes within a matter of hours. Damage to foliage leads to a range of problems for trees including reduced photosynthesis and increased vulnerability to pests and disease, scientists at Oregon State University say. …The forest analysis showed that sun exposure, microclimate and aspect – the direction a slope faces – were factors that made some areas more sensitive to the heat dome. Other factors were tree species, stand age, the timing and pattern of budburst – when dormant buds open and begin to grow – and the presence of foliar pathogens such as the fungus that causes Swiss needle cast in Douglas-fir trees.

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Judge halts Montana Kootenai Forest logging project over road impact on grizzlies

By Micah Drew
The Daily Montanan
November 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A federal judge has halted a logging project in the Kootenai National Forest, saying the federal government failed to correctly analyze the impacts to grizzly bears. The Knotty Pine Project, a 10-year project that would have authorized 7,465 acres of prescribed burning and 2,593 acres of commercial harvest in the Cabinet-Yaak Mountains, has been in litigation since 2022. The Center for Biological Diversity led a coalition of environmental groups …in suing the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, saying it could devastate the small group of grizzly bears that lives in the region due to increased roadwork. U.S. District Court Judge Dana Christensen granted a preliminary junction the following year, but issued his final ruling last week. …“High road densities in low elevation habitats may result in grizzly bear avoidance or displacement from important spring habitat and high mortality risks,” Christensen wrote.

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Health & Safety

Researcher finds dangerous stew of proteins in blood of wildlands firefighters

By Peter Aleshire
The Payson Roundup
November 11, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

Smoke from wildfires causes a cascade of changes in the proteins in the blood of firefighters, according to a groundbreaking study by researchers from the University of Arizona School of Public Health. The researchers found 60 different changes in blood proteins in samples taken from 42 firefighters who battled the Los Angeles wildfires that charred 23,000 acres and forced 10,000 people to flee their homes. Those changes in serum proteome are associated with a potential increased risk of cancer, abnormal cell growth, immune system dysfunction and inflammatory response. …The findings are the latest to highlight the health risks facing wildland firefighters, who for decades have actually been barred from wearing protective masks on the fire lines for fear it would limit their work and lead to overheating. The Forest Service recently shifted its policy to allow firefighters to wear masks if they choose.

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Forest History & Archives

The murder that ended a young Bay Area editor’s crusade to save the redwoods

By Martha Ross
The Mercury News
November 26, 2025
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: US West

Ralph Sidney Smith

Ten days before 31-year-old newspaper editor Ralph Sidney Smith was shot and killed by an angry reader on the streets of Redwood City, he enjoyed a final visit to his favorite place on Earth. …Like other early environmental activists, including John Muir, Smith used his writing to sound the alarm about rampant logging that was destroying California’s coastal redwoods, telling the public and the politically connected — including industrialist and US Senator Leland Stanford — that the state was on the brink of losing a vital natural resource. …As editor of the Times and Gazette, Smith prioritized covering logging’s widespread destruction of ancient redwood forests throughout the state. …Smith wasn’t a pure “nature preservationist” because his ideal public forest would be a self-supporting tourist attraction, with roads, hotels, camping grounds and “streams stocked with trout.” …Smith’s reported “love of justice” put him in harm’s way. …Tragically, Smith’s murder meant he didn’t live to see a state park established in Big Basin.

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