Region Archives: US West

Business & Politics

Mad River Mass Timber Brings New Jobs to Humboldt’s Beleaguered Timber Industry

By Liam Gwynn
Redwood News
June 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

©MadRiverMassTimber

In Korbel, the first mass timber facility in California is offering new opportunities for Humboldt County’s struggling timber industry. Mad River Mass Timber creates dowel-laminated timber that offers a climate-friendly alternative to steel and concrete. … Recent code changes in California have allowed for the creation of buildings up to 18 stories tall using only mass timber. This combined with a new California law that will require embodied carbon in new construction has opened up new opportunities for the mass timber industry. …Mad River Mass Timber recently moved out of their concept phase and are looking to expand operations in phase two later this year. “We’ll be expanding to our phase two facility, which will be a much higher capacity, more of like the large-scale mass timber,” said Mad River Mass Timber founder George Schmidbauer. “For that, we’ll be hiring up to 30 employees of various different skill sets.”

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The bipartisan wildfire bill is ready. Oregon’s US senators should help pass it.

Kurt Miller, CEO and executive director, Northwest Public Power Association
The Hill
June 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

Federal law allows utilities operating on national forest land to remove hazardous trees only within 10 feet of a power line. In Western forests, where trees routinely reach 100 feet tall and a single ignition can drive hundreds of thousands of acres of destruction, 10 feet is not a safety standard — it is a disaster waiting to happen. The Fix Our Forests Act would extend that authority to 150 feet, alongside streamlined federal permitting for wildfire mitigation work and tighter judicial review timelines on fuel-reduction projects… The bill has cleared the House by a 279-141 vote and passed the Senate Agriculture Committee by a vote of 18 to 5 … Utility operators across the West are calling for it. But it does not have the support of Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.). …The community-owned utilities I represent … don’t have a stake in what gets logged. But they do have a stake in whether the lines stay up when fire moves through…

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In Memoriam

Richard Guy Bennett Sr., a pillar of the Idaho lumber industry, died at 92

The Idaho Statesman
June 22, 2026
Category: In Memoriam
Region: United States, US West

Richard Bennett

Richard Guy Bennett Sr., 92, a true pillar of the Idaho lumber industry and a beloved patriarch, passed away peacefully at his home in Rancho Mirage, California, on June 12, 2026. Born in Killam, Alberta, Canada on July 25, 1933, Richard spent his early years in Canada before the family relocated to Clarkston, Washington. His legendary journey in the timber industry began…  in the early 1940s, his father secured a contract to manufacture ammunition boxes for the war effort. It soon became apparent that a dedicated facility was needed to support the increasing demand, and Bennett Box Factory was born. Over time, the operation expanded and evolved into a full-scale lumber mill. With Dick’s vision and leadership, the company continued to grow as he successfully negotiated the purchase of additional mills and timberlands, helping build one of the region’s most respected family-owned lumber businesses. …A funeral service will be held on Friday, June 26, 2026

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

UC Berkeley lab turns wildfire salvage into mass timber for sustainable construction

By Dan Ashley and Tim Didion
ABC News 7
June 22, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

As wildfires become more frequent and intense across California, researchers at the University of California, Berkeley are exploring ways to turn wood from fire-affected forests into useful building materials rather than letting it go to waste. At the university’s wood lab, Assistant Professor Paul Mayencourt demonstrated a construction technique known as dowel-laminated timber, or DLT. The process combines smaller pieces of lumber into larger structural panels using wooden dowels. “So, it’s enabling us to use more diverse sources of lumber. And that includes salvage from forest fires and also salvage from demolition,” Mayencourt said. Graduate student Adam Gordon showcased a model theater designed for Portland State University that uses fabricated timber panels, sometimes referred to as mass timber. He said the materials can be adapted for both structural and design purposes. …The Berkeley wood lab has received support from several sources, including a recent innovation grant from the U.S. Forest Service.

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Skanska breaks ground on Cleveland High School modernization, a landmark mass timber project

Skanska USA Inc.
June 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

PORTLAND, OR – Skanska, a leading global construction and development firm, broke ground on the modernization of Cleveland High School for Portland Public Schools on June 12. The project will replace the existing school with an approximately 300,000-square-foot high school on the same site… Construction is expected to begin in July 2026 and be completed in the summer of 2029. …Designed by Mahlum Architects and Studio Petretti, the new school will incorporate nearly 870,000 board feet of Pacific Northwest-sourced mass timber, making it one of the largest K-12 mass timber projects in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest and the first school in the area designed to the Type IV Heavy Timber (HT) construction standard. The structure will combine Acoustic Dowel Laminated Timber (ADLT) decking, glulam beams and columns, structural steel, and low-carbon concrete to create a durable, lower-carbon building that supports both sustainability and long-term performance.

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Nakamoto Forestry Debuts Clear Vertical Grain Sugi

By Nakamoto Forestry
EIN Presswire
June 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

PORTLAND, OR — Nakamoto Forestry, the world’s leading provider of premium Japanese wood cladding, debuts Clear Vertical Grain (CVG) Sugi, expanding its portfolio to include the most exacting grade of sugi, or Japanese cedar, available in North America. In Japan, sugi (Cryptomeria japonica) is the predominant species used in construction and architecture, valued for its grain, workability, and natural resistance to insects, decay, and fire. Defined by a straight, exceptionally clear grain with little to no knots, CVG Sugi offers a calm, uniform surface with no visual distraction. The grain runs clean and consistent from end to end, producing a refined, architectural expression that emphasizes proportion and light rather than texture or pattern.

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Mass Timber Breaks New Ground at Oregon Lab

By Tim Newcomb
Engineering News Record
June 15, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

©Huang Complex

Mass timber construction continues to set new benchmarks. At Oregon State University … readies the 2027 opening of the Jen-Hsun Huang and Lori Mills Huang Collaborative Innovation Complex, the first mass timber lab building on the West Coast and one that sets new standards in meeting stringent research lab requirements. …ZGF Architects partner KPFF engineers helped solve the challenge of meeting the 2,000 micro-inches per second (MIPS) floor vibration requirement for a wet lab building by using a mass plywood panel. The fully plywood creation is stacked for structure and features glue for strength, but it creates a new product that can handle the vibration requirements. …Freres Engineered Wood in Oregon, the only U.S. site making mass plywood panels, crafted the material. The company says it uses structural composite lumber with multiple layers of density-graded Douglas fir veneers glued and pressed in a variety of combinations and orientations to create 1-in. layers called lamellas.

See the project details from ZGF Architects A First-of-Its-Kind Mass Timber Lab and Oregon State University website

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California launches Mass Timber Coalition

By Board of Forestry and Fire Protection
State of California
June 12, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

SACRAMENTO, California — The State of California announced the formation of the state’s first California Mass Timber Coalition, a new public-private partnership designed to accelerate the adoption of mass timber construction, drive forest health and wildfire mitigation efforts, and accelerate economic development across the state’s rural and urban communities. The Coalition brings together state and federal agencies, county and local governments, research institutions, industry representatives, forest sector organizations, non-profit organizations, and community partners to support the establishment of an in-state mass timber industry. …The Coalition will also work to establish state policy and regulations that drive positive outcomes for both utilization and manufacturing of in-state mass timber, as well as industry development and market growth. …Terry O’Brien, Chair of the Board of Forestry and Fire Protection, said “This collaborative approach will help California leverage innovation, reduce wildfire risks, and support economic opportunities for communities throughout the State.” Click here for more information.

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Forestry

US Forest Service eyes emergency logging for 5 million acres in Idaho, Montana

The Daily Montanan in the Bonner County Bee
June 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The U.S. Forest Service published an eight-page emergency plan that it says addresses catastrophic wind damage done to federal forest land after two weather emergencies, but environmental watchdog groups say it’s rushed and could result in millions of acres being used for commercial logging with an almost impossibly short public comment period. The project’s scoping document doesn’t disclose which parcels of federal forest land will be logged and treated as part of the emergency plans, but a table shows it could involve more than 5 million acres spanning across Montana and Idaho’s Panhandle. The notice, issued by the USFS Northern Regional office in Missoula, said the “emergency salvage” effort is a response to the straight-line and high wind events in December 2025 and April 2026. The Forest Service said the windstorms created large patches of overturned or “downed” trees.

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Oregon lawsuit could upend federal management of public lands

By Alex Brown
Stateline
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A new lawsuit challenging a logging project in Oregon threatens to unravel the management plans governing hundreds of millions of acres of federal public land. At stake are thousands of leases and permits covering billions of dollars of economic activity — including mining, drilling, grazing, logging, ski resorts, wind and solar projects, outdoor recreation, hunting and fishing. If successful, the lawsuit could throw the management of huge swaths of the West into chaos. Some experts fear the new legal uncertainty around federal agencies’ management authority could unleash a tsunami of lawsuits targeting everything from mining to the conservation of wildlife habitat. “When you throw that whole system into chaos, it’s a problem whether you’re the oil and gas industry or the timber industry,” said Susan Jane Brown, the attorney who filed the lawsuit and serves as principal at Silvix Resources, a nonprofit environmental law firm.

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High-severity fires burn 30 times more acreage than 40 years ago, researchers find

By Alison Hewitt
University of California, Los Angeles
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Forest fires now burn ten times more acreage annually than in 1985, while wildfire severity has gotten even worse. In California, 30 times more acreage burned from high-severity, forest-killing fires, according to new UCLA research. In the 1980s and 1990s, California’s forest fires burned mostly at low or moderate severity, generally benefiting ecosystems. But as fires have grown in size, severe fires causing widespread tree death have overtaken beneficial fire as the most common fire type in California’s forests. Changes are tied to the increasingly warm and arid environment. These aridity-driven changes were also stronger in more densely forested areas, said senior author Park Williams. …The two main causes for the increase in fire severity are fuel density [and] environmental dryness. …The researcher’s conclusions show that the state can make some headway in protecting California’s forests with changes in forest management, such as doing more manual clearing of underbrush and conducting more prescribed burns.

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New soil sensors launched in Tonto National Forest for flooding, wildfire prevention

By Brian Webb
Fox 10 Phoenix
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

PHOENIX — New technology is coming to Arizona to predict flooding and prevent wildfires. Moisture sensors are going in the ground to gauge just how dry the land is. Soil that is too dry cannot absorb water, which creates a higher risk for flooding and wildfires. This advancement should help predict wildfires and flooding across Arizona. Salt River Project (SRP) officials say plant moisture, in both dead and alive plants, is one of the most important indicators of wildfire danger. However, taking field samples by hand is tough, so this new technology will do the heavy lifting. SRP crews in the Tonto National Forest are planting tiny pieces of technology in the ground to provide data. …These moisture measurements should provide important clues, like the risk of a wildfire at a given location, how likely it is to spread, how big it might get, and predicting floods.

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Tree-killing emerald ash borer beetle confirmed in 3 more towns in the Willamette Valley

By Riley Martinez
Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

©InvasiveSpeciesCouncilBC

The emerald ash borer, an invasive tree-killing beetle, was confirmed in three more Willamette Valley cities this month, the Oregon Department of Forestry announced Tuesday. …The infestations were all found within an emerald ash borer quarantine zone spanning Clackamas, Marion, Multnomah, Washington and Yamhill counties. The state agriculture department has ordered tree material from ash, olive and white fringe trees — including firewood from any hardwood tree — to stay within that quarantine zone to prevent spreading the invasive beetle. …Kat Bethea, an emerald ash borer support specialist with ODF, said the spread of the infestation across the region isn’t a question of “if” but of “when.” …Bethea said not transporting firewood long distances “is actually one of the largest things that everyone in Oregon can do” to help manage the spread of the invasive beetle.

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Forest Service unveils massive salvage logging project

By Eric Barker
Moscow-Pullman Daily News
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The U.S. Forest Service will hold a single public comment period with a Monday deadline on a huge project to salvage wind-toppled timber across vast sections of six national forests in northern Idaho and western Montana. Calling it an emergency that poses imminent threats to “life, property, and important natural, cultural, or historic resources,” the federal land management agency intends to use emergency authorities and new rules governing environmental analysis and endangered species consultation to expedite what is otherwise a deliberative process that can take years to complete. “The expediency with which this is being handled is in response to that emergency being declared by the president and the Forest Service response to that declaration,” said agency spokesperson Sara Rouse. …Mike Reggear, agency resource manager for the Idaho Forest Group, said the Forest Service isn’t set up to respond with the speed needed to salvage timber killed by events like windstorms and fire. 

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Memo Reveals Forest Service Could Open Recommended Wilderness to Off-road Vehicles

By Maggie Dresser
The Flathead Beacon
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

MONTANA — More than 190,000 acres of recommended wilderness in the Flathead National Forest could be opened up to off-road vehicles (ORVs), according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture secretarial memorandum that leaked earlier this month. The memo, which laid out federal officials’ plans to unwind protections that have been in place in northwest Montana since 2018, prompted local and national advocacy groups to rush to action. Following four years of interagency collaboration, environmental analysis and an extensive public participation process, the Flathead National Forest’s Revised Land Management Plan was officially adopted in 2018, designating 193,403 acres of land as recommended wilderness… The New York Times earlier this month reported that a leaked memo directed the use of ORVs on 5 million acres in Montana and Idaho, 193,403 acres of which are within recommended wilderness areas on the Flathead National Forest. Local stakeholders say the directive would unwind years of collaborative work if it comes to fruition.

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Nonprofit takes aim at Colorado’s growing mountain pine beetle problem one tree at a time

By Spencer Wilson
CBS News
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Colorado nonprofit, the Mountain Pine Beetle Foundation, is working to help landowners fight back against growing infestations of mountain pine beetles and protect their properties from wildfires. Founder Wesley Manney said the organization’s goal is simple: stop beetle infestations before they grow and reduce wildfire risk at the same time. What started as a handful of infested trees in Evergreen, Colorado, has turned into hundreds for landowner Jon Hager. …Now, crews are cutting down and chipping dozens of beetle-killed and infested trees on his property as part of an effort to slow the spread of mountain pine beetles, which experts warn could become a bigger problem during Colorado’s dry summer conditions. “It’s our responsibility as landowners,” Hager said. “We should take care of the beetle problem so it doesn’t spread to our neighbours.”

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Idaho National Forests Receive Collaborative Restoration Funding

By Mike Williamson
The US Department of Agriculture
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The US Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service is funding two landscapes within the Boise and Payette national forests for inclusion in the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program (CFLRP). The congressionally funded program provides long-term support for partnership-driven projects that improve watershed health, reduce wildfire risk and strengthen local economies. The West Central Idaho Initiative covers 2.3 million acres of public and private lands stretching from Boise to New Meadows, Idaho. The initiative focuses on reducing wildfire risk to communities through logging, thinning and prescribed fire. The area was chosen for a 10-year funding commitment based on its strong history of collaboration. …The Weiser-Little Salmon Headwaters landscape continues CFLRP involvement dating back to 2012. In the first 10 years of funding, projects there treated nearly 170,000 acres of hazardous vegetation, resulting in the equivalent of about 36,000 logging trucks of timber sold. 

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Heat waves increase wildfire risk – a new study explains how much, and it’s not a small number

By Dmitri Kalashnikov, Cong Yin, Madhulika Gurazada and Mukesh Kumar
University of California
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©Mukesh_Kumar

When heat waves hit the Western United States, the risk of wildfires quickly rises. The prolonged heat dries out vegetation, but that’s only part of the cause – heat waves also play other roles in spreading wildfires. In a new study, our team of fire and climate scientists looked at two decades of wildfire activity in the West, from 2001 to 2024, and for the first time quantified the effect of heat waves on those fires. We expected a big impact, but the numbers still surprised us: While heat waves, which we defined as three or more consecutive days with temperatures in the top tenth of hottest days, accounted for only 12% to 15% of warm-season days, we found that 42% of all the area burned by fires had occurred during or right after a heat wave. Moreover, the amount of the area that burned each day was more than 50% larger during heat waves than during the cooler days right before the heat wave began in many parts of the West. In some regions, the difference was much larger – up to 300%.

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Before the Flame: How Washington state is reshaping its forests to survive the next wildfire

By Bridget Chavez
King 5 News
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

RONALD, Wash. — The sound of wildfire prevention isn’t a fire engine siren. It’s chainsaws, wood chippers and heavy machinery chewing through brush. Across Kittitas County, crews are removing smaller trees, trimming limbs and clearing brush in an effort to reshape forests before the next wildfire season arrives. But the work underway here is also challenging one of the most deeply held ideas many people have about forests: That more trees always means a healthier forest. “Green is good,” said Katie Zander, the North Service Forestry coordinator for the Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Southeast Region. “But out here historically we did not have this dense of forest stands.” According to Zander, eastern Washington forests evolved with regular low-intensity fires that naturally cleared out brush and smaller trees. But decades of aggressive wildfire suppression changed that pattern.

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Weyerhaeuser Launches Fighting Fires Together Campaign to Support Oregon Wildland Firefighting

By Weyerhaeuser Company
PR Newswire
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SEATTLE — Weyerhaeuser Company announced the fifth year of its Fighting Fires Together campaign, combining the company’s wildfire management and community support efforts across Oregon. The campaign unifies support for rural fire districts, wildfire response partnerships, and resources that strengthen firefighter and community resilience in fire-prone areas of the state. The campaign addresses the realities of wildfire response in rural Oregon, where communities and agencies often face limited resources to protect both residents and wildland firefighters. …Across Oregon, grants from the company’s Giving Fund help rural fire protection districts secure critical rescue, medical and wildland firefighting tools, along with expanded training to support faster, safer responses when wildfires occur. …Additionally, Weyerhaeuser is supporting the next generation of wildland firefighters and forestry professionals. A recent $10,000 grant to Lane Community College’s Wildland Fire Management Program will support funding for tools and safety equipment… 

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Trump administration to propose tripling logging in Blue Mountains forests

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The Trump administration is about to propose an overhaul of how it manages nearly 5 million acres in northeastern Oregon and southeastern Washington. Logging could triple in the Umatilla, Malheur and Wallowa-Whitman national forests, which comprise the U.S. Forest Service’s Blue Mountains region. The agency’s proposal would eliminate regulations that protect large trees and sensitive habitats. It would also boost timber sale goals from 106 million board feet to 364 million over a decade. That’s raising hopes in a region where timber jobs have declined and lumber mills have closed. But others doubt the timber goals. And environmental groups have called the plan a raid on one of the wildest places in the United States. …Mark Webb, executive director of Blue Mountains Forest Partners — which coordinates between environmental and timber interests to find common ground — doubts whether the forest service can reach the ambitious logging goals it sets forth in its draft proposal.

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USDA puts Montana forests back to work, supporting jobs and rural communities

The US Department of Agriculture
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz today signed the Montana Tri-Forest Federal Sustained-Yield Unit management plan that will support economic stability, strengthen central Montana’s wood processing capacity and advance forest health though timber harvests that will be processed within the boundaries of the unit. The Tri-Forest unit includes the Beaverhead-Deerlodge, Custer Gallatin and Helena-Lewis and Clark national forests. Leadership from these forests will work together to provide forest products that support local economic stability, strengthen central Montana’s wood-processing capacity and advance forest health in alignment with existing forest plans.  

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Stanford study finds surprising upside of prescribed burns

By Anna FitzGerald Guth
SF Gate
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…In a study published in the journal Science on June 11, Stanford University researchers found that intentionally burning 500,000 acres of conifer forests in California every year could reduce wildfire smoke pollution overall by about 10% over a decade. “This study highlights that yes, prescribed fire is good, but sometimes the benefits take a while,” Marshall Burke, a professor in the Doerr School of Sustainability at Stanford and the senior study author, told SFGATE. The study relied on two decades of satellite measurements of fire severity and smoke particulate matter across California. Reflecting similar findings in previous research, it documented that low-severity wildfires, a stand-in for prescribed burning, can cut the immediate likelihood of future severe wildfires in the same area by 92%. …California burns less than the study’s recommended 500,000 acres in prescribed burns, although the state’s goal is to incinerate about that much fuel every year.

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Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek declares emergency due to wildfire threat

Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek has declared an emergency due to the imminent threat of wildfires in the state. “Increasing heat, dry vegetation, and shifting winds continue to align and create dangerous conditions that demand immediate action,” Kotek said in a press release Tuesday morning. “I am declaring a State of Emergency to ensure all available resources — firefighting crews, aerial support, ground resources, and emergency personnel are prepared for deployments — to protect people, property, and our natural landscapes.” The declaration ensures that the Oregon Department of Forestry and the state fire marshal’s office have the wildfire crews and equipment they need. And it directs the Oregon Department of Emergency Management to activate the state’s Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan. From Tuesday morning through Tuesday evening, the National Weather Service in Pendleton declared a red flag warning throughout much of eastern Washington and northeast Oregon. 

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CAL FIRE Supports Innovative Science with New Forest Health Research Grant Funding

Sierra News Online
June 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©CalFireFlickr

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) is pleased to announce the availability of $4.5 million in California Climate Investments (CCI) funding and $3 million in Proposition 4 California Climate Bond (Prop 4) funding through the Forest Health Research Grants Program. CAL FIRE is seeking research proposals that advance scientific understanding and develop practical solutions to the urgent forest health and wildfire challenges facing California’s landscapes and communities. This year’s Forest Health Research grants include three concurrent solicitations for CCI-funded research, research led by graduate students, and larger Prop 4 funded collaborative research projects that support landscape-scale forest and fire management. These grants are intended to support research that delivers direct benefits to landowners, resource agencies, fire management organizations, and decision-makers across the state. CAL FIRE encourages innovative proposals that generate new knowledge and produce actionable tools that strengthen forest health, improve wildfire resilience, and support effective land management.

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All of Oregon officially enters fire season

By Zach Urness
The Salem Statesman Journal
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Fire season has begun in Oregon. Hot and dry conditions have forest managers across the state on edge as the season officially started June 15, bringing with it restrictions meant to prevent wildfires. The main restriction is a prohibition on debris and backyard burning on state, county and private lands, although official rules are set by local fire districts. Debris burning is the most frequent human cause of wildfires that spread in populated areas. “With it being this hot and dry, one little bit of wind could spread an ember and start a fire. It’s the perfect time to cover your pile and wait until fall,” Oregon Department of Forestry spokeswoman Jessica Neujahr said.

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Biologists use cutting-edge tech to help save Oregon’s threatened species

By Kristian Foden-Vencil
Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…After decades of biologists going out into the woods and physically counting animals, the agency is now turning to sound recorders and AI because they’re cheaper and can gather a lot more information. “Autonomous recording units with rechargeable batteries, memory cards, and the software costs are coming in the $600-$700 range per device,” said Oregon Department of Forestry biologist Corey Grinnell. The agency is currently spending millions to send biologists into the forests to conduct callback surveys, where they mimic a bird call and count responses. …The agency now has 23 devices and plans to deploy more as it moves away from callback surveys. …There is some concern that using recorders might put biologists out of work. But lead ODF biologist Vanessa Petro isn’t so sure. She said that once the AI counts birds in a recording, the tally will need to be checked by an actual biologist.

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Oregon chainsaw competition creates buzz for timber industry

By Joni Auden Land
Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

©SICC

Just behind a car dealership in Sandy, Oregon, the roar of chainsaws became almost deafening, as the smell of sawdust hung in the air. Seventeen artists gathered last weekend for the fourth annual Sandy Invitational Chainsaw Competition, carving a variety of complex designs — Sasquatches, roses, frogs and more — using powerful and dangerous tools. It’s all part of a local effort to spur interest in the timber industry. Industry leaders at the event say they struggle to hire enough workers, and they hope this art will be a gateway for a person’s career around trees. Competition founder Austin Ernesti is the executive director of Trajectory, a Sandy-based organization that promotes timber careers and sustainable forest practices. His nonprofit organizes field trips for students to attend. He conceived of the chainsaw competition to put a spotlight on Sandy, a city founded in large part by the timber industry.

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Brewing battle over Forest Service glyphosate spraying near Lake Tahoe’s pristine waters

By Cary Gillam
The New Lede
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The US government plans to spray multiple types of herbicides – including the cancer-linked glyphosate weed killer – within national forest property that abuts the community’s cherished lake. …Katherine Levy is among a number of Lake Tahoe-area residents and officials who are fighting to block or alter the US Forest Service project, which is aimed at restoration of areas damaged by the 2021 Caldor Fire. The wildfire burned through more than 200,000 acres in and around the Lake Tahoe Basin. The Forest Service manages more than 156,000 acres of National Forest land within that basin. …The brewing battle is only one of similar fights over forestry pesticide use playing out across the US, but the Lake Tahoe issue has drawn the attention of leaders with the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement, who have been lobbying the US Environmental Protection Agency to ban or severely restrict glyphosate use.

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To save Oregon’s forests, market our worst wood

By Naresh Khanal, forestry researcher
The Bend Bulletin
June 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

…Decades of fire suppression have left many dry pine forests overcrowded with small trees and dense brush. …Foresters largely agree on the solution: restore forests through thinning and prescribed fire. The problem is that restoration work is expensive, especially when it involves removing small-diameter trees that have little commercial value. …Taxpayers shoulder most of the burden while hazardous fuels continue accumulating across millions of acres. …Oregon is well positioned to tackle this problem. New wood products such as mass timber can create markets for the very material that restoration projects remove. Instead of treating small trees as waste, we can turn them into building materials… The goal is to keep large fire-resistant trees while removing smaller fuels that make forests more vulnerable to extreme fires. …Oregon already has the tools and workforce to address this problem. The question is whether we are willing to act before the next historic fire season arrives.

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Health & Safety

EPA denies environmental groups’ challenge to Humboldt Redwood permit

The US Environmental Protection Agency
June 23, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The US Environmental Protection Agency has denied a petition seeking to overturn an air operating permit for Humboldt Redwood sawmill and electric generating facility in Humboldt County, California. …The petition was submitted on January 1, 2025, by the Environmental Protection Information Center and the Humboldt Coalition for Clean Energy. The groups asked EPA to object to operating permit which was issued by the North Coast Unified Air Quality Management District for the Humboldt Redwood facility. EPA issued a final order denying the petition on May 5, 2026. The agency stated that the order explains the basis for its decision to reject the request. The permit covers operations at a facility that combines lumber manufacturing with electricity generation. The notice does not provide additional details about the petitioners’ objections or the grounds for EPA’s decision.

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Longview paper mill implosion: What 3 investigations are examining

By Anumita Kaur, Lulu Ramadan and Conrad Swanson
The Seattle Times
June 24, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

Federal investigators have embarked on the monthslong probe into the fatal disaster at Nippon Dynawave Packaging (NDP). …The U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board said it aims to release a final report in 12 to 18 months. An investigative update is expected within three to five months. Four Chemical Safety Board investigators remain in Longview as of Tuesday. …Investigators are focused on four key areas, Wingard said: mechanisms that led to the tank’s failure; the tank’s location at the facility; the paper mill’s maintenance and mechanical integrity; and relevant facility, corporate and industry standards. …The Washington State Department of Labor and Industries launched a workplace safety investigation immediately after the tank ruptured. …The Washington State Department of Ecology is probing whether NDP violated its environmental permits. …The US Chemical Safety Board seeks to identify the root cause of industrial incidents — regardless of whether existing regulations were violated. [to access the full story a Seattle Times subscription is required]

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Forest Fires

Olympic National Park crews battle 86-acre wildfire sparked by lightning near Mount Olympus

By Adel Toay
King 5 News
June 26, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

Washington — Olympic National Park crews are responding to an 86-acre wildfire sparked by lightning in a remote area west of Mount Olympus, according to park officials. The Mount Tom Creek Fire was reported by backpackers on June 24 after a lightning storm moved through the area June 23. The fire is burning on a steep, densely forested mountainside in the Mount Tom Creek Basin, about 5 miles west-northwest of Mount Olympus. Officials said the fire remained 0% contained as of Thursday. No structures have been damaged and a full suppression strategy is being used. Fire managers have deployed aviation and ground resources, including Type 1 and Type 2 helicopters, reconnaissance aircraft, wildland fire engines and hand crews. A Type 3 Incident Management Team is scheduled to assume command of the fire Friday. The fire is located about 6 miles from the Hoh Rain Forest administrative site. The Hoh Rain Forest Visitor Center, campground and trails remain open.

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Wind-whipped Utah wildfire grows to nearly 60,000 acres, prompts evacuations

By Bill Hutchinson
ABC News
June 24, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©U.S. Forest Service

A wildfire burning in Utah has grown to nearly 60,000 acres, prompting mandatory evacuations of homes and campgrounds and completely closing a highway in the mountainous area. Fueled by drought conditions and blustery winds, the Cottonwood Fire in Beaver County has almost doubled in size in the past 24 hours. The Cottonwood Fire in Beaver County started Monday afternoon and spread rapidly, fanned by wind gusts of up to 50 mph, according to Utah Fire Info. As of Wednesday afternoon, the blaze had grown to 59,613 acres “due to high temperatures, gusty winds, and extremely dry fuels,” the U.S. Forest Service said in a statement early Wednesday. The fire remains 0% contained. …Evacuation orders remained in effect on Wednesday morning. …The Cottonwood Fire is one of 349 wildfires currently burning across Utah, consuming more than 200 square miles, according to Utah Fire Info.

Additional coverage in the Utah News Dispatch, by Annie Knox: Gov. Spencer Cox says ‘there’s no end in sight’ to wildfire that could be Utah’s most destructive ever

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McCauley Springs Fire near Jemez Springs prompts evacuation orders, electric shutoff

By Patrick Lohmann
Source New Mexico
June 24, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©NMFireInfo

The McCauley Springs wildfire, detected early Wednesday morning near Jemez Springs, has a “high potential for spread,” according to Santa Fe National Forest officials, and has prompted evacuation orders and electrical shutoffs as crews race to suppress the blaze. The fire was discovered around 6 a.m. Wednesday south of New Mexico State Road 4 about six miles northeast of Jemez Springs. It grew from 30 acres around 10:30 a.m. to roughly 150 acres by 2 p.m, according to the Santa Fe National Forest. The wildfire prompted immediate evacuation orders in the Jemez Falls Campground, and nearby communities of Sierra los Pinos and Vallecitos. The Jemez Electric Co-op shut off power to customers east of Thompson’s Ridge. Forest Service officials said the Santa Fe Interagency Hotshot Crew has responded, along with two helicopters, and that another crew tackling the 147-acre Rio Fire nearby in the Española area has been reassigned to McCauley Springs Fire. 

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Rock Canyon Fire Progress Holds at 75%; Out-of-State Blazes Blamed for Shifting Regional Smoke Haze

State of Arizona
June 23, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

ARIZONA — Firefighters continue to make progress to control the Rock Canyon Fire. As of June 23, 2026, the fire covers 4,823 acres and is 75% contained. This will be the last update barring any unforeseen changes. Fire activity remained minimal across the incident. Remaining resources continued to seek out and extinguish isolated heat sources. Crews have started planting an appropriate seed mixture to help stabilize soil as part of suppression repair. Today, firefighters will continue to mop up any heat adjacent to containment lines and monitor for heat on the fire’s interior. The Rock Canyon Fire continues to produce very little smoke, but ash whirls may be visible in the fire area. Smoke in the area is from the fires in Nevada and the new fire in Beaver, Utah. More resources are being reassigned to support other fires in the region. Fire area closures remain in effect on BLM and the Kaibab National Forest managed lands.

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Rapidly-Growing Wildfire Approaches Eagle Point, Utah

By Matt Lorelli
POWDER Magazine
June 23, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©USForestService

The Cottonwood Fire started yesterday afternoon (June 22, 2026) near Beaver, Utah, and has exploded to more than 10,000 acres in less than 24 hours. The fire is 0% contained as of Tuesday, June 23, and officials are issuing mandatory evacuation orders for Eagle Point, Merchant Valley, HiLo Estates, Arrowhead Summer Homes, and all surrounding areas. Eagle Point is a well-known ski area in the region, and its access road, SR-153, is closed. According to a map provided by Watch Duty, the Cottonwood Fire has not yet reached Eagle Point’s slopes, but the flames are within a few miles.

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More resources arrive to fight Pocket Fire north of Sedona

KNAU Arizona Public Radio
June 20, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

About 200 personnel were working on Saturday to contain a wildfire that started the day before and prompted the evacuation of Oak Creek Canyon. The Pocket Fire is burning about 7 miles north of Sedona and had grown to 500 acres by Saturday morning. Coconino National Forest officials say a Northern Arizona Type 3 Incident Management Team is now in command the fire response. Seven hotshot crews, one dozer and 13 engines plus six helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft are assigned to the fire. More personnel were expected to arrive throughout Saturday. Evacuations of Oak Creek Canyon remain in effect and State Route 89A is closed between Fort Tuthill in Flagstaff and the north end of Sedona. Woody Mountain Road is also closed past Forest Road 536. Coconino County officials gave the “Go” order Friday evening for all residents and visitors between Sedona and Forest Highlands.

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Raging Utah wildfire prompts evacuation as crews struggle to contain it: Officials

By Bill Hutchinson
ABC News
June 21, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©UtahFireInfo

Mandatory evacuations are underway for hundreds of people on Sunday in a central Utah town being threatened by a wind-driven, out-of-control wildfire, officials said. The Iron Fire is burning in Juab County, about 28 miles southwest of Provo, and officials said on Sunday that flames are bearing down on Eureka, Utah, a small town in the East Tintic Mountains. The wildfire, which started on Friday night, had burned more than 13,300 acres by Sunday morning and remains 0% contained, according to Utah Fire Info. The wildfire, according to Utah Fire Info, was human-caused, but details of what sparked the blaze have not been released. Shifting winds and dry vegetation fueled the wildfire on Saturday and sent it in the direction of Eureka, where authorities issued mandatory evacuation orders on Saturday. 

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Eastern Washington wildfire forces evacuations and destroys homes

Associated Press in KUOW News and Information
June 17, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©Spokane County

SPOKANE, Wash.  — High winds drove a wildfire into an eastern Washington neighborhood, forcing the evacuation of about 1,500 people and destroying some homes, fire officials said Wednesday. It’s unclear how many homes were lost in Spokane. Fire officials were working Wednesday to determine the number and the full extent of the damage, said Matthew Vinci, fire chief for Spokane County Fire District 9. He confirmed Tuesday that some homes were engulfed in flames. The evacuation order for the 1,500 residents remained in effect Wednesday, said Chandra Fox, deputy director for Spokane County Emergency Management. “Our concern is for increased winds Wednesday afternoon,” Fox said. …Fire crews from Washington state and Idaho attacked the fire from the ground and air, but it quickly grew to 225 acres (.35 square miles). It was 10% contained Wednesday morning, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

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