Region Archives: US West

Business & Politics

Eagle Forest Products: Precision, People and a Doubled Production at Tangent Facility

By Chaille Brindley
Pallet Enterprise
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — Inside the remanufacturing plant in Tangent, Oregon, owned by Eagle Forest Products, output has quietly doubled in two years. The change didn’t come from chasing volume for volume’s sake. It came from tightening flow, upgrading key machinery, installing the right leadership—and refusing to compete with the very pallet companies the firm supplies. From its headquarters in Eagle, Idaho, the company operates a national network. Eagle manufactures in Tangent and Roseburg, Oregon; Osceola, Iowa; and Piedmont, Alabama. It operates a distribution and trading yard in Montgomery, Texas, along with a small East Coast trading office. …Looking ahead, Eagle is exploring expansion into the South Atlantic region with a model similar to its Texas operation – combining distribution, sales and some manufacturing. The search begins with finding the right personnel. Brad admitted.

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Push grows for second biomass plant as thinning efforts face deadline

By Peter Aleshire
Payson Roundup
March 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

Arizona — Efforts to scale up forest thinning across northern Arizona are intensifying, as local officials, industry representatives and environmental groups warn that time is running short to reduce wildfire risk and protect critical watersheds. “Everybody is aware now that there is a biomass issue, but very, very, very few people have any real knowledge of the solution,” Eastern Arizona Counties Organization Executive Director Pascal Berlioux said during a recent Natural Resources Working Group meeting. A broad coalition is advocating for construction of a second biomass-burning power plant, arguing it is essential to prevent the collapse of the region’s wood products industry. Without that industry, leaders say, large-scale thinning efforts could stall, increasing the likelihood of severe wildfires threatening forest communities. 

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Current, former workers sue Western Forest Products’ Vancouver, Washington operation

By Sarah Wolf
The Columbian
March 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

WASHINGTON STATE– Current and former employees are suing Western Forest Products’ Vancouver operation, alleging the company failed to give employees breaks and pay wages owed. …Western manufactures lumber at its Fruit Valley location and formerly operated a Columbia Vista sawmill that closed after a fire last year. …The group of current and former employees also allege Western Forest Products didn’t keep accurate payroll records. The complaint states about 40 employees could have been impacted by the alleged practices. Babita Khunkhun, spokesperson for Western Forest Products, said “While we cannot comment on the specifics of the allegations at this time, we take all employee concerns seriously,” Khunkhun said. The company is reviewing the lawsuit and will respond through the appropriate legal process, she added. Western Forest Products recently unveiled plans to expand its Fruit Valley manufacturing operation.

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Don Williams at 90: A Lifetime of Service to Cottage Grove

By Cindy Wheeldreyer
Cottage Grove Sentinel
March 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

©Facebook

Friends and colleagues honor Don Williams, longtime Weyerhaeuser manager, civic leader and volunteer who helped shape the city’s modern era. Williams celebrates his 90th birthday on March 25. …He was born in 1936 in Everett, Washington, and launched his career with Weyerhaeuser in 1954 as a millworker apprentice. …In December 1975, Williams transferred to the Cottage Grove Weyerhaeuser Mill to serve as Head Filer, where he oversaw chip quality control. As the company restructured, he took on broader responsibilities. He advanced from Area Superintendent to Department Manager and supervised quality control for more than 200 machine centers. He eventually concluded his Weyerhaeuser career as the mill’s Health, Environmental & Safety Manager, a role that reflected both his technical expertise and his steady leadership. Williams built a reputation as a fair and principled negotiator. Both management and union leaders trusted him at the bargaining table, and he helped maintain stability during periods of industry change.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The Government Building That Refuses to Be Disposable

By Paul Makovsky
ARCHITECT Magazine
March 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

WASHINGTON — On most state capitol campuses, buildings are treated as monuments—fixed, permanent, and resistant to change. In Olympia, Washington, the opposite has just occurred. The Newhouse Replacement Building, designed by The Miller Hull Partnership is a deliberate rethinking of what civic architecture can be when permanence is no longer assumed, when materials are treated as part of a lifecycle, and when sustainability is measured not just in performance metrics, but in cultural continuity. …Rather than erase the original structure, the design team approached the project as an act of deconstruction—carefully dismantling the old building and salvaging its materials for reuse. …In a region defined by its forests, the use of mass timber is both practical and symbolic. …Its structural system incorporates Acoustic Dowel Laminated Timber (ADLT) floor decks—an innovative assembly that replaces adhesives with precision-milled wood joinery and integrates acoustic insulation directly into the material system.

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Industry coalition seeks injunction against California’s SB 343

By Stefanie Valentic
Resource Recycling
March 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

A cross-sector group of packaging producers, farmers, restaurants and grocers has filed a class action lawsuit seeking a preliminary injunction to block enforcement of SB 343, California’s controversial recycling labeling law. The coalition argues the legislation imposes unconstitutional restrictions on free speech, ultimately working against recycling participation programs by making it harder for consumers to understand what can and cannot go in the bin. At the heart of the complaint is SB 343’s prohibition on the use of widely recognized recycling symbols and claims, even when those claims are factually accurate, according to the suit. Under the law, producers cannot label packaging as recyclable unless it meets state-defined, “rigid” criteria that allegedly fails to reflect how recycling actually works. …“SB 343 establishes labeling standards that could discourage innovation and limit the ability to provide accurate recycling information to consumers,” the American Forest and Paper Association stated.

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Colorado Commissioners adopt wildfire code, table decision on other building codes

By Clayton Chaney
The Pagosa Springs Sun
March 18, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

COLORADO — The Archuleta County Board of County Commissioners (BoCC) unanimously voted to table its decision on adopting eight new building-related codes. Those are the 2024 editions of international codes, including the residential code, building code, energy and conservation code, mechanical code, fuel and gas code, existing building code, property maintenance code, and the swimming pool and spa code. During the meeting, the BoCC also considered, and unanimously approved, Resolution 2026-27, adopting the 2025 Colorado Wildfire Resiliency Code (CWRC), along with amendments to snow load requirements for manufactured structures. …Commissioner John Ranson described them as an “unfunded mandate,” adding, “there’s no two-ways about it.” He mentioned that in conversations with local builders, many are preparing for these codes to make construction costs go up.

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Top-Down Construction, Mass Timber, and Nanotechnology Reshape Building

By Mick Cornett
Urban Land Institute
March 18, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

AUSTIN, Texas — Four ULI panelists took to a stage in Austin, Texas, recently to discuss techniques that are already available to the industry, even if adoption is slower than necessary. …During the panel, Daniel Esparza, principal of Easton, Maryland–based TGE Group, explained a method of construction in which the roof and all floors of a high-rise building are built no more than 6 feet off the ground and then moved into place. The safety features of this approach are obvious. …Lisa Podesto—director of mass timber and sustainable construction innovation for Aptos, California–based Swinerton—highlighted mass timber construction and the benefits that can make these prefabricated products stronger than concrete and steel on a per ton basis. …Chris Bishop, president of the National Concrete Refinement Institute, said nanotechnology, in which nanoparticles are added to concrete mix to provide strength and durability, is not new to the concrete industry, is gaining more attention.

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Washington Governor Signs Bill Promoting Small “Kit Homes”

Daily Fly
March 16, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

OLYMPIA, WA — A new Washington state law aimed at expanding affordable housing options will make it easier to build small “kit homes” and backyard units across the state. Gov. Bob Ferguson signed Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill 5552 into law, following four years of work by Sen. Jeff Wilson. The measure directs the Washington State Building Code Council to develop rules specifically for kit homes under 800 square feet. Supporters say the legislation is intended to help address Washington’s housing shortage by reducing costs and simplifying the construction process for smaller homes. Wilson said standardized kit-home designs could allow plans to be approved once at the state level rather than requiring separate design reviews for each project. Kit homes typically include precut lumber delivered as a package that can be assembled on site. Modern versions often use prefabricated wall and roof panels to speed construction, and start at less than $10,000.

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Forestry

US Department of Agriculture Announces Availability of New Log Truck Route Planner Tool

The USDA Agriculture Marketing Service
March 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) announced the launch of an innovative new tool, the Log Truck Route Planner, to help forest owners, mill operators, and log truckers in the Pacific Northwest allocate timber and schedule log trucks. The system can assist users in coordinating routing between logging sites and sawmills which can significantly increase the returns to log truck owners/operators, create efficiencies in the operation of sawmills, and ultimately increase the market for US timber products. The new tool offers a way for the timber industry to reduce empty backhaul miles and increase the volume of timber moved daily, with a goal of increasing efficiency and revenue earned. The tool was developed in partnership with Washington State University and the Forest Service. The tool provides both a log allocator and truck scheduler, which can be run sequentially or independently.

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Forest Service proposes widespread Uncompahgre logging, fuel mitigation, habitat work

By Dennis Webb
The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel
March 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USFSColorado — The U.S. Forest Service is proposing an array of logging, hazardous fuel mitigation work and wildlife habitat improvements on the southern part of the Uncompahgre Plateau, with a chief goal of reducing the risk of large-scale wildfires on a landscape being affected by a changing climate. The Norwood and Ouray ranger districts of the Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre and Gunnison (GMUG) national forests have begun accepting public comment on the draft environmental assessment for the South Uncompahgre Hazardous Fuels and Ecological Resiliency project. The project area encompasses some 267,300 acres, mostly on the plateau, in Montrose, Ouray and San Miguel counties, reaching almost to Mesa County. That area includes about 245,000 acres of national forest land. Most work would occur on national forest land, but where projects occur next to private land, opportunities for cross-boundary work would be explored.

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Heat dome burns off mountain snow in western U.S., flashing warning for fire season

CBC News
March 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Mountains that normally see their peak snowpack in March are brown this year, thanks to a spring heat dome that baked the western U.S. for much of the second half of March. That’s raising alarm bells for the fire season, which is already ramping up. John Abatzoglu, a professor of climatology at the University of California Merced, said everything is “lining up for a potentially nasty fire season across the west… the warning signs are flashing.” The heat wave eased over the weekend after a sustained run of temperatures 11 to 17 C above normal — with highs in the 30s and 40s in some states. This would be “virtually impossible” without climate change caused by human CO2 pollution, mainly from fossil fuels. Early snow-melt has been linked to a longer fire season, as it dries out the landscape and provides more time and opportunity for fires to ignite and spread

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Lawsuit challenges Bureau of Land Management logging project near Grants Pass over owl surveys

By Roman Battaglia
Oregon Public Broadcasting
March 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The timber sale is part of the BLM’s Last Chance timber project, which proposes commercial logging and wildfire reduction efforts across about 11,000 acres northeast of Grants Pass. The project is the subject of a lawsuit filed by the environmental group KS Wild. A hearing was held last week on a proposed preliminary injunction that would halt current and future logging while the case proceeds. Attorney Sydney Wilkins said the group is concerned the BLM incorrectly determined the project area was unoccupied by northern spotted owls. “There were calls heard and recorded,” she said. ”And so there was a question about whether their unoccupied determination was arbitrary and capricious or inappropriate.” …Wilkins said a decision on the preliminary injunction is expected in the coming weeks.

Related coverage in The Bulletin, by Michael Kohn: Central Oregon LandWatch Forum to focus on public forest protections

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This Year’s Snow Drought is Etching Itself Into Utah Forest History

By David Condos
KUER 90.1
March 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

UTAH — Trees in the West are remarkably flexible — they endure extended droughts, sweltering summers and subzero winters as part of a wildly variable climate. Even so, this year’s snow drought is going to leave a mark. Without a winter snowpack to convert into spring runoff, trees will shift into very low gear, growing little and leaving narrow bands in their tree-ring records. In really bad years there is no growth, and no ring, at all. Justin DeRose, dendrochronologist from the Department of Wildland Resources is buckling up this year for that possibility. 2026 will be a “tree-ring marker year” in Utah and likely the West, he believes. …The year’s snow total is spectacularly bad, he said… But he is paying close attention this year all the same, because very bad snow years seem to be cropping up more often than they did in the past.

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Oregon Dems request feds get more public input on massive new logging plans for western forests

By Alex Baumhardt
The Oregon Capital Chronicle
March 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Oregon’s congressional Democrats are asking federal officials to give the public more time to learn about and comment on new plans that would open up millions of acres of federal forests in Oregon to logging activity not seen since the 1960s. The Bureau of Land Management in late February announced it would change the Western Oregon Resource Management Plans that have governed logging and conservation in Oregon counties for decades. The stated goals were “maximum” timber production to “advance Trump administration priorities,” including logging in areas that are home to federally protected, vulnerable species. The announcement kicked off a month-long public comment period that ended March 23, but the agency did not hold any public meetings. Officials said in the announcement they would not hold any meetings before releasing a draft proposal for new logging. Oregon’s U.S. Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden and [others], all Democrats, said such generational change in logging practices deserves far more public scrutiny.

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Forest ‘fading’ in the face of withering drought

By Peter Aleshire
The Payson Roundup
March 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A new satellite-based study indicates widespread drought stress and insect damage across the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests, with significant implications for wildfire risk, forest management and long-term ecosystem change. Researchers found roughly one in four ponderosa pines are experiencing moderate to high levels of drought and insect damage. More than half show signs of “fading,” a condition tied to prolonged moisture loss, though the severity varies by ranger district. The study analyzed tree “greenness” across the forest, a key indicator of health derived from satellite imagery. The Apache-Sitgreaves spans roughly 6 million acres in northern Arizona, including the White Mountains, among the state’s wetter regions. Despite that reputation, the findings reinforce a growing body of research showing that decades of drought, increasingly severe wildfires and bark beetle infestations are reshaping these forests. In some areas, ponderosa pine stands have failed to recover following high-intensity fires, particularly where drought stress was already severe.

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Colorado Congressman wants answers about U.S. Forest Service seasonal hiring after last year’s staffing cuts, hiring freeze

By Ryan Spencer
Sky-Hi News
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

After firing about 3,400 employees nationwide and instituting a seasonal hiring freeze last year, the U.S. Forest Service is planning to hire 2,000 seasonal workers this year. A Colorado lawmaker wants more information about the U.S. Forest Service’s plans to hire seasonal staff again this summer, after the agency cut thousands of positions and did not employ seasonal help last year. U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse, whose district includes Eagle, Grand, Jackson, Routt and Summit counties, penned a letter to Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz earlier this month describing the impact that massive cuts to staffing have had on the agency and the importance of seasonal workers. Rep. Jared Huffman, D-California, also joined the letter. “As you know, seasonal employees play a critical role in the maintenance and stewardship of some of our most treasured public lands and national forests,” Neguse wrote, noting that more than 130 million people visit the country’s national forests annually.

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Oregon Department of Forestry Scores Futuristic Wildfire Detection Airplane

By Peter Madsen
The Bend Source
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Oregon Department of Forestry will be stationing a new, multi-mission airplane, equipped with technology out of a sci-fi movie, in Prineville — just in time for fire season. The Twin Otter, which some appreciators refer to as a “Twotter,” will relieve ODF’s Partenavia P.68 Observer airplane, which will be retired after more than three decades of use. Manufactured by de Havilland Canada, the Twin Otter was originally introduced in 1966 and is valued for its short takeoff and landing abilities and stable flight at slow speeds, which make the plane ideal for low-level surveys and data collection, according to the manufacturer. The Twin Otter comes with a $7.8 million price tag, yet its state-of-the-art sensing technology, which tacked on an extra $5.4 million, is what makes the plane a multi-mission aircraft. The plane will be kitted with AI-enabled, wide-area and augmented-reality mapping abilities, along with high-definition thermal imaging and night vision capabilities. 

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Idaho forest land near Mount Spokane protected from development

By Michael Wright
The Spokesman-Review
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A large chunk of private forest land near Mount Spokane is now permanently protected from development. The Idaho Department of Lands announced Wednesday that more than 22,000 acres of Inland Empire Paper Co. is now protected under a conservation easement. Inland Empire is owned by the Cowles Co., which also owns The Spokesman-Review. The property is between Mount Spokane and Spirit Lake in Bonner and Kootenai counties. …It includes habitat for a variety of wildlife, such as elk, deer and westslope cutthroat trout, according to a Department of Lands news release. It also covers part of the Spokane Valley-Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer, which provides drinking water for people in Spokane and Kootenai counties. The deal locks in public access for the property, which has long been used by hunters, hikers, berry pickers and other recreationists.

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Forest Service closes large sections of Sandias for two-year wildfire prevention projects

By Pat Davis
Route 66 Independent
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USFS

New Mexico — The Cibola National Forest will begin work on two major projects restricting visitor use and public access to the over 140 acres along the Sandia Crest area through fall of 2027. USFS officials will work to remove hazard fuels and hazard tree removal in conjunction with vegetation thinning treatments around the Sandia Crest and New Mexico Highway 536 to promote forest health and resilience, as well as to limit threats to the vast antenna arrays on top of the Crest which are essential to local television and emergency communications, according to plan details reviewed by the Route 66 Independent. Repeated outbreaks of insects and disease on the Sandia Mountains have contributed to a high number of dead trees on the mountain, officials shared. “High fuel-loading around the Crest presents significant risks to critical infrastructure that could be damaged or destroyed in the event of a high-severity wildfire,” they said in a statement.

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USDA Says It Needs Roads to Fight Remote Wildfires, but a New Study Says Roads Bring More Fire

By Zoë Rom
Inside Climate News
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

When the US announced plans to rescind a rule limiting roadbuilding and timber harvests on national forests, officials called the repeal necessary to prevent and manage wildfires. But as the USDA prepares to release its draft environmental impact statement for the rescission, that justification is unraveling. And many critics of the move see the claim that roads are needed to fight fires in remote forests as cover for a giveaway to the timber industry. …Wildfires on federal lands average about five times the size of those in the rest of the country, leading some land managers to argue that national forests are a front line for fighting the nation’s steep increase in wildland blazes. Yet a new study has fire scientists, frontline firefighters, legal experts and the agency’s own historical record saying that roads don’t reduce wildfire risk; they multiply it. [see Three-decade record of contiguous-U.S. national forest wildfires indicates increased density of ignitions near roads]

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Lawsuit: Beartooth Forest Project to Help Whitebark Pines, Fire Safety Hurts Both

By Robert Chaney
The Mountain Journal
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©ParksCanada

A new lawsuit against the U.S. Forest Service starts with a straightforward claim: A proposed project to help whitebark pine trees near Yellowstone National Park will actually hurt them. But as the complaint unspools, nearly every major controversy involving the Forest Service comes up… The lawsuit pits the Gallatin Wildlife Association, Alliance for the Wild Rockies and Native Ecosystems Council against Gardiner District Ranger Clint Kolarich and the Custer Gallatin National Forest. On March 4, the plaintiffs sent a 60-day notice of intent to sue unless the Forest Service accepts their objections. The Cooke City Fuels and Forest Health Project would strengthen Cooke City and Silver Gate against wildfire, according to its Finding Of No Significant Impact, or FONSI notice. …Forest Service project manager Abigail Hauch listed multiple justifications in the FONSI for the activity, including… “improving the health and condition of the forest ecosystem, including whitebark pine.”

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California announces 300 wildfire projects fast-tracked in 300 days

By Gavin Newsom
Government of California
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SACRAMENTO – Following Governor Newsom’s emergency proclamation on wildfire-prone forests last March, state agencies have coordinated to cut red tape and fast-track critical wildfire safety projects across the state, all while maintaining vital environmental safeguards. Over 300 projects across nearly 57,000 acres have been approved in the state in just 300 days. Through this streamlined process, projects are now being approved in as little as 30 days, saving a year or more of review and red tape for more complicated projects. Following a Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force’s Sierra Nevada Regional meeting on March 19, the Task Force shared an update on California’s progress to streamline permitting for wildfire projects, which has enabled a diversity of agencies, tribes, and organizations to move faster than ever before to deliver real results.

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How to weigh in on BLM’s plans to quadruple logging in Oregon’s forests

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

You have until Monday to provide input on the Trump administration’s plan to dramatically increase logging in western Oregon forests. Last month, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management announced its plans to quadruple the amount of logging that could happen in the forests it manages. Specifically, the agency aims to revise management plans for areas designated as O&C Lands, named after the Oregon and California Railroad company that once owned them. BLM is eyeing 2.5 million acres of forests spanning 17 counties across Oregon. They include mature and old-growth forests treasured by recreationists, hunters, conservationists and tourism businesses who now worry about Oregon’s remaining old trees that are on the chopping block. Timber industry representatives welcomed the news, celebrating a potential return to 20th-century logging levels that once supported rural economies.

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Lawsuit claims Forest Service project will harm whitebark pine near Yellowstone

By Darrell Ehrlick
The Daily Montanan
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Three organizations and an individual are suing the Gardiner District of the Custer Gallatin National Forest — for a plan they say hurts the already-endangered whitebark pine tree while ignoring lynx and grizzly habitat, and relying on unproven studies. The groups say the federal government is ignoring its rules and seems to be disregarding its own maps of protected lynx area in an effort to preserve the rare whitebark pine trees, despite admitting in its own documents that the efforts to preserve the trees could actually harm them. The lawsuit … centers on logging north of Yellowstone National Park. A technique, called “daylight thinning,” which involves removing trees near a whitebark pine, is not backed by scientific research according to the court documents, and the organizations point out that the Forest Service admits that in the process of thinning, it could actually wind up killing some of the whitebark pine trees. 

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Further proof is coming: Idaho can’t afford a federal lands grab

By Bryan Clark
Idaho Statesman
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

This week, we have yet another reminder that Idaho can’t possibly afford to take over or manage federal lands. A forthcoming study, which will be published Friday, provides the most recent reliable estimates of exactly how much Idaho would lose if it were to take over federal lands. The study, which was commissioned by Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, Idaho Business for the Outdoors, the Idaho Outfitters and Guides Association, and the Idaho Wildlife Federation, was performed by Peterson and Associates, which has long been a go-to source for economic analysis of this type in Idaho. While the full results won’t be released until Friday, the top-line figures are stark. Idaho would lose $837.7 million directly, in the form of spending by the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management and other federal agencies, as well as Payment in Lieu of Taxes and Secure Rural Schools payments. That’s nearly 16% of Idaho’s general fund budget.

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Federal law doesn’t mandate minimum amounts of logging in Alaska’s Tongass rainforest, judge says

By James Brooks
News From The States
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A federal judge in Alaska has rejected a lawsuit that sought to reinstate a management plan that would allow heavier logging in the world’s largest temperate old-growth rainforest. The result leaves an Obama-era management plan in place, but it could be short-lived: The administration of President Donald Trump is already at work on a new plan that could allow more logging in Alaska’s Tongass National Forest. …The three groups sued the U.S. Department of Agriculture — the parent organization of the U.S. Forest Service — last year, alleging in part that the federal Tongass Timber Reform Act of 1990 required the Forest Service to offer enough timber sales to meet market demand. Gleason ruled otherwise, finding that TTRA does not impose “a mandatory duty” on the Forest Service to ensure that market demand is met by Tongass timber sales.

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Mild winter helps Oregon forestry crews plant over two million seedlings ahead of schedule

KVAL 13 Oregon
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A mild winter and spring-like weather has helped the Oregon Department of Forestry stay ahead of schedule on replanting state forest timber harvest areas this year, with about two million seedlings already planted. “This has been a great planting season with no shutdowns due to weather,” said John Walter, ODF’s state forests silviculturist. “All our districts are done or will be this month. The only exception being Klamath Lake—they typically plant into May and have about 60,000 to get in.” Douglas fir remains the dominant species in most Western Oregon forests, but ODF said it builds diversity into its reforestation plans to promote resilience and provide additional types of timber products. “This year we planted about 74 percent Doug(las) Fir, 17 percent Hemlock, two percent each of Western Red Cedar and Noble Fir, one percent each of Grand Fir and Sitka Spruce with the remaining three percent Pondarosa Pine,” Walter said.

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Harvesting Burned Trees May Seem a No-Brainer. But It Poses Big Risks

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, US West

From the moment he became BC’s forests minister, Ravi Parmar has been under pressure to increase logging rates in the province. One way he has decided to do that is by expediting the logging of forests burned in recent wildfires. He issued the Fort Nelson First Nation a new licence to log 100,000 cubic metres of trees in burned forests in BC’s remote northeast corner. …A number of industry associations, including the Council of Forest Industries, asked him to set “definitive, aggressive timelines for completion” of plans to accelerate logging in burned forests. …But increasing “wildfire salvage” of forests, Parmar is travelling down the same road that has seen BC’s logging rates plummet by more than half since the heyday of the 1980s. …Accelerated logging of burned trees may help bend the curve, but history shows that it is short-lived and comes at the cost of degraded ecosystems and even sharper declines ahead.

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Bureau of Land Management wants to write plan to increase logging in western Oregon

By Alan Torres
The Eugene Register-Guard
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©BLM_Flickr

The Bureau of Land Management wants to increase logging in western Oregon and public comment is open on the proposal. The “Oregon and California Revested Railroad Lands Act” from 1937 gives the BLM authority to govern 2.46 million acres of federal land in 18 western Oregon counties. The BLM wants to rewrite the plan governing this area to increase timber harvesting in line with “historically higher levels of production” and “the nation’s need for domestic sources of timber and fiber.” According to the BLM, 267 million board feet of timber was harvested from these lands in 2025. From 1960 through 1989, the lands produced an annual average of 1,078 million board feet, before harvesting declined in 1990 in response to the northern spotted owl’s endangered species listing. …The BLM is seeking public comment on “the scope of the analysis, potential alternatives and identification of relevant information, studies and Areas of Critical Environmental Concern” to take into account while writing this plan.

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Alaska Court Ruling Halts Massive Old-Growth Rainforest Logging Plan

Sierra Club
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Sierra Club and our allies Southeast Alaska Conservation Council…  secured a major victory in our lawsuit challenging an enormous commercial timber harvest and road-building plan for Prince of Wales Island in the Tongass National Forest of Southeast Alaska.  A federal judge ruled that project approval violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which sets standards for public engagement on federal projects that will alter the environment, and the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA), which requires federal agencies to evaluate how federal use of public lands will affect subsistence uses and needs. The court found that the Forest Service “presented local communities with vague, hypothetical, and over-inclusive representations of the Project’s effects over a 15-year period.” It’s not yet clear whether the Forest Service will have to abandon the project entirely, because the judge has not yet decided on a legal remedy. Read the court ruling

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Alaskan Logging Case Dismissed in a Blow to the State’s Dwindling Lumber Industry

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A federal court in Anchorage has dismissed a case filed last year by an Alaska sawmill seeking to force the Forest Service to increase logging in the Tongass National Forest. …Log sales have slowed to a trickle in the forest that covers most of southeast Alaska, endangering the region’s remaining logging and lumber operations, Viking Lumber and its co-plaintiffs… said that without additional sales from the Tongass, it would run out of logs to saw. Without more it would have to close the mill it operates on remote Prince of Wales Island, where the biggest town, Craig, has about 1,000 residents and few other options for jobs. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins had been supportive of Viking… but in court her department argued successfully that a 2016 management plan for Tongass merely mapped out goals and doesn’t bind the Forest Service to offer specific quantities or types of timber for sale, contrary to Viking’s claims. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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Drone footage shows herculean effort to remove 60 acres of logs in Clackamas County

By Tatum Todd
Oregon Live
March 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — For months, the surface of a popular boating waterway in Clackamas County has been jammed with logs and branches, stretched across 60 acres of surface water. But that’s already starting to change. Portland General Electric, which manages the dam at one end of the log-choked North Fork Reservoir, said on Thursday that the company has started the painstaking process of removing the logs and debris, which washed into the waterway during December’s heavy flooding. PGE spokesperson Grace Boehm said that most of the logs ended up in the reservoir over the course of a short period that also dumped 62,000 cubic feet per second worth of water into the reservoir — notching a place as the 4th highest flow into the waterway on record. …PGE will be setting aside 800 logs from the recovery effort for the company to donate to stream restoration habitats.

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State, U.S. Forest Service use new agreement to target 400,000 acres of forest for management

By Jordan Hansen
The Ekalaka Eagle
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Montana and the U.S. Forest Service announced last week they were moving ahead on a shared agreement between the two to do forestry work in large swathes of the state. Last summer, the state and Forest Service signed an agreement formalizing closer cooperation between federal forest management operations and the state Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. That came about two months after a Trump Administration executive order seeking to increase domestic timber production. On Friday, Gov. Greg Gianforte, DNRC Director Amanda Kaster and U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz said that two large areas have been selected for state and federal work. The focus of the work will be on approximately 213,910 acres in the Flathead and Kootenai National Forests and 200,000 acres within the Bitterroot National Forest. The project areas were selected due to wildfire risk and how close they are to being implemented.

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This is our chance to transform how Cal Fire manages its forests

By Evan Mills, environmental analyst (energy, forests and climate change)
The Mercury News
March 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Dismantling environmental protections is in vogue, even those enhancing safety and economic prosperity. But California is bucking the trend and now on the verge of modernizing how its 14 Demonstration State Forests are managed. Cal Fire manages these public lands, which span 85,000 acres and 10 counties. Redwoods and other trees are routinely logged to pay for operations, according to a 1947 law that mandates “maximum sustained yield” – that’s simply a euphemism for removing as much lumber as possible without shrinking the forest. This extractive agribusiness model prioritizes revenues, often contrary to the goals of demonstration, recreation and forward-looking research. …In February, Assemblyman Chris Rogers, a Democrat from Santa Rosa, introduced AB 2494, sponsored by the Environmental Protection Information Center, to modernize and align forestry management with the state’s broader goals. The new science-based approach prioritizes restoration and tribal co-management. It decouples funding from timber operations, financing it instead through an existing lumber tax. 

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How Oregon scientists are solving the problem of Crater Lake’s dying trees

By Cassandra Profita
Oregon Public Broadcasting
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

In 2002, Crater Lake National Park ecologist Michael Murray thought the park’s majestic whitebark pine trees were as good as gone. An invasive fungus called white pine blister rust was killing the trees around the crater of the lake. …It was accidentally introduced to the U.S. in a shipment of infected nursery trees from Europe around 1900. Since then, it’s wiped out millions of whitebark pine trees and threatened the survival of the species. But Oregon scientist Richard Sniezko, a geneticist with the U.S. Forest Service, said some whitebark pine trees have natural resistance to the blister rust disease. …Murray took this science with him to his current job as forest pathologist for the ministry of forests in British Columbia. In 2013, he launched Canada’s first blister rust resistance program for whitebark pine, and he has identified about 25 trees in British Columbia that can survive blister rust infection.

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Commissioner Upthegrove Applauds Legislature for Restoring Wildfire Funding

Washington Department of Natural Resources
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Commissioner of Public Lands Dave Upthegrove commended the Legislature for restoring funding for the Department of Natural Resources’ wildfire prevention and response and community resilience programs. “Wildfire touches everyone in Washington. I commend legislators for recognizing that and – even in a difficult budget year – finding ways to make sure we’re prepared for wildfires when they start and can help prevent them before they even do,” said Commissioner Upthegrove. “As I traveled the state during my first year as Commissioner, I heard over and over how critical this funding is for keeping frontline fire districts equipped, reducing the fire danger in communities near wildlands, and protecting the air quality of our urban centers. I carried that message back to legislators to ensure they understood the stakes – and I am glad they did.” The legislature’s supplemental budget restores $60 million in wildfire prevention and preparedness funding that had been cut last year.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

USDA Approves $25 Million Loan Guarantee For Biomass Gasification Project In California

By Erin Krueger
Biomass Magazine
March 24, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

The USDA on March 23 announced it will provide a $25 million loan guarantee under the Rural Development Timber Production Expansion Program to support a 3-megawatt (MW) biomass gasification project in California under development by Blue Mountain Electric Co. The loan guarantee will be used to finance a 3 MW gasification plant that will convert forestry biomass waste into synthetic natural gas through the process of thermochemical conversion. The total project cost is estimated at $42.2 million. According to USDA, the loan guarantee will support construction of the facility and provide working capital for operating expenses during the first year. In its announcement, the USDA also indicated there is a pending grant application for the project that has already been approved by the Efficiency Team. The agency said the guaranteed loan package had not been submitted at that time.

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Climate change is already happening in Colorado. Here are 10 signs we can see right now.

By Michael Booth
The Colorado Sun
March 22, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

COLORADO — Here is just a sampling of things happening right now in Colorado that we can’t attribute solely to climate change, but that we know will be happening more and more often precisely because of climate change. …State Forester Matt McCombs calls it “an end of innocence,” as he travels the state warning people of the unstoppable demise of beloved forest tracts. …The looming, climate-related loss of Colorado’s entire band of ponderosa forest truly worries Gent and his birding colleagues. …Matt McCombs is an eternal optimist about the collective: the gathering and harnessing of human intelligence and ingenuity in adapting to threats. But as the state forester, he knows too much about the looming death of Colorado’s entire ponderosa forest to be optimistic about the individual: This majestic specimen in front of him is doomed, and he points at a small eruption of sap to prove it. 

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Forest Fires

Wildfire south of Colorado Springs grows to 7,300 acres with no containment

By David Krause
The Colorado Sun
March 23, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

The wildfire burning south of Colorado Springs has grown to more than 7,300 acres and officials said the state highway on the west side of Fort Carson will likely remain closed through Friday. The 24 fire started Wednesday and currently there is no containment, but in an update Monday morning officials said overnight “fire crews were successfully able to tie in all control lines, boxing in the fire. As of this morning, control lines remain strong.” The fire started near mile marker 24 on Colorado 115, which connects Colorado Springs to Penrose. The road will be closed at least through Friday, but will be reevaluated daily, officials said Monday. The cause of the fire remains under investigation but started off the highway, not on the Army base, officials said last week. The fire was mapped at 7,385 acres early Monday morning, up from 4,900 acres Sunday morning.

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