Region Archives: US West

Froggy Foibles

Yuletide kissers, smooch without guilt!

By Steve Lundeberg
Oregon State University
December 15, 2025
Category: Froggy Foibles
Region: US West

CORVALLIS, Ore. – If mistletoe’s status as a nutrient-stealing freeloader has been cooling your holiday ardor, new research led by an Oregon State University scientist may help relight the fire. A survey of urban forests in seven western Oregon cities found no observable connection between mistletoe infestation and negative health outcomes for the trees it was parasitizing. So worry not: Your yuletide kissing tradition probably does not involve a tree killer. And as you’re setting concern aside, you might want to head outside. “This is the best time of year to look for mistletoe because there are no leaves on the trees,” said College of Forestry professor emeritus Dave Shaw, an OSU Extension Service forest health specialist. “Also, chances are it will be found in an oak tree – most other trees don’t get infested. So if you are looking for a kiss, keep an eye out for oaks.”

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Business & Politics

William Silva named Director of National Mass Timber

By Swinerton
PR Newswire
December 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

William Silva

PORTLAND, Ore – Swinerton Builders (Swinerton), a national commercial general contractor and construction manager with office locations nationwide, continues its commitment to advancing and accelerating the adoption of mass timber construction with the appointment of William Silva as Director, National Mass Timber. In this position, Silva will lead the creation of a Mass Timber Center of Excellence, a cross-functional initiative designed by Swinerton to drive innovation, collaboration and integrate the company’s extensive general contracting expertise with its affiliate firm, Timberlab. Timberlab’s specialized capabilities include mass timber procurement, manufacturing, fabrication, engineering and design. The center will serve as a hub for innovation, education, and operational excellence, empowering Swinerton teams nationwide to deliver exceptional mass timber projects and continue to be a trusted resource for its clients, design partners, and engineering partners.

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From Steinway to sawdust: The fight to save Alaska’s last mill

By Kathy Hoekstra
Pacific Legal Foundation
December 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Sarah Dahlstrom

For decades, specialized wood from Alaska’s Tongass National Forest has shaped the sound of Steinway pianos and Martin guitars and strengthened everything from NASA wind tunnels to helicopter blades. Much of that wood comes from one family-owned mill: Viking Lumber on Prince of Wales Island. Now, a broken promise from Washington bureaucrats threatens to silence the saws and erase a legacy built on generations of grit and sacrifice. This month’s episode of American Heroes, interviews Sarah Dahlstrom, daughter of Viking Lumber founder Kirk Dahlstrom. She works alongside her dad as a fierce advocate for Alaska’s timber workers and proudly discusses her family’s uniquely American story. In 1994, her father moved the family to southeast Alaska to revive a bankrupt mill. They built Viking Lumber in a rural region, creating year-round jobs and uplifting communities. Viking is the last remaining mill in the U.S. able to provide the wood that gives Steinway pianos their world-famous sound.

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Partial shutdown of Eastern Washington paper plant will cut 200 jobs

Tri-City Herald
December 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

WALLULA, Washington — Packaging Corporation of America (PCA) announced a partial shutdown of its Wallula containerboard plant that will cut production by nearly half. The move will result in 200 layoffs at the plant along the Columbia River in western Walla Walla County, southeast of Pasco. Lake Forest, Illinois-based PCA said it will permanently shut down its No. 2 paper machine and kraft pulping facilities. It will continue to operate its No. 3 paper machine and recycled pulping facilities at the site. PCA operates 10 mills and 92 corrugated products plants and related facilities. …The net result will reduce the plant’s capacity to 285,000 tons, a reduction of 250,000 tons. The shutdown will be completed by the end of the first quarter of 2026. ”Wood fiber and purchased power costs are by far the highest in our system,” said Mark Kowlzan, CEO. PCA indicated it would move some production to lower-cost facilities.

Related coverage:

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Washington Forest Protection Association announces interim government relations leadership team

The Washington Forest Protection Association
December 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

OLYMPIA, Wash. – The Washington Forest Protection Association (WFPA) today announced a collaborative leadership structure to guide its government relations work heading into the 2026 legislative session. Former House Minority Leader J.T. Wilcox will serve as Interim Government Relations Director, bringing decades of experience in forest policy, coalition-building, and legislative affairs. Matt Doumit, with more than a decade of experience in natural resource management, legislative policy making, and lobbying, will serve as Policy Associate and support WFPA’s advocacy and policy initiatives. Tom Davis, who announced his retirement as WFPA Director of Government Relations earlier this year, will serve as a resource for Wilcox and Doumit, providing context and institutional knowledge. …The new team approach reflects WFPA’s continued commitment to collaborative advocacy and to advancing policies that sustain Washington’s working forests today and for future generations.

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Boise Cascade CEO Nate Jorgensen to retire; Jeff Strom appointed successor

By Boise Cascade Company
Businesswire
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Nate Jorgensen

Jeff Strom

BOISE, Idaho — Boise Cascade announced that Nate Jorgensen, Chief Executive Officer, plans to retire effective March 2, 2026. The board of directors has unanimously appointed Jeff Strom, Chief Operating Officer, to succeed Jorgensen effective March 3, 2026. Jorgensen will continue to serve as a director on the Company’s board after his retirement. The Company does not plan to backfill the chief operating officer role after the transition. …Tom Carlile, Chair of Boise Cascade’s board… “On behalf of the entire board of directors, I extend our gratitude to Nate Jorgensen for his outstanding leadership.” …Jeff Strom joined Boise Cascade in 2006 and has served in several key roles and progressive leadership positions during his 19 years with the Company. Prior to his current role as the chief operating officer, he was the executive vice president of the Company’s building materials distribution (BMD) division.

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Roseburg Consolidates Veneer Production to Strengthen Long-Term Competitiveness

Roseburg Forest Products
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — Roseburg Forest Products announced today that it has ceased operations at its Weed, Calif., veneer plant as of Dec. 3, 2025. The company is consolidating veneer production at its Oregon mills, where it has installed new, highly efficient veneer equipment. The move strengthens Roseburg’s long-term competitiveness in engineered wood and softwood plywood markets. This closure, along with the company’s decision in September 2025 to exit the hardwood plywood market, enables Roseburg to concentrate resources on a more focused product portfolio and optimize its position in increasingly competitive wood products markets. “With the investments we have made in our Riddle and Coquille, Ore., veneer and softwood plywood mills, we have repositioned these operations as well as our Riddle Engineered Wood mill to be among the most cost-competitive mills in the industry,” said Stuart Gray, Roseburg’s president and CEO.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Fire tests confirm not all fire-retardant treatments are equal

By Western Wood Preservers Institute
EIN Presswire
December 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

VANCOUVER, Washington — With the growing threat of wildfire fueling increased demand for fire-retardant treated wood (FRTW), some manufacturers are offering unproven lower-cost alternatives to help meet that demand, often making misleading claims to promote them. But recent testing shows it’s easy to get burned when those claims don’t stand up to scrutiny. …Results from the testing showed when it comes to meeting rigorous codes-specified fire testing requirements, wood products treated with non-pressure applied fire retardants are unreliable at best. In all 10 tests of pressure-treated FRTW, the products met the objective of the ASTM E2768 — the flame front did not progress beyond 10.5 feet at any point during the 30-minute test. But 19 of the 21 products treated with non-pressure applied fire retardants were unable to reach the 30-minute mark without the flame front progressing beyond 10.5 feet.

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Research concludes Wildland-Urban Interface building codes save lives – and money

By Peter Aleshire
The Payson Roundup
December 4, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

Payson sits in one of the most fire-prone regions in the country, yet the town council has repeatedly declined to adopt fire-hardening requirements for new homes. The town several years ago approved a Firewise landscaping code aimed at thinning overgrown properties and removing vegetation touching buildings. However, the council has twice rejected a Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) building code, most recently after firefighters urged the council to adopt standards for new construction. Builders raised concerns about cost, and the council again declined to move forward. A collection of studies suggests those concerns may not align with the data. Research from federal agencies, economists and wildfire specialists shows WUI codes add little to the cost of new construction, save money over time and significantly reduce the likelihood of homes burning in a wildfire. The research also points to major long-term savings for taxpayers, who shoulder growing federal firefighting costs in high-risk areas.

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Forestry

The western U.S. Tried to stop wildfires and it backfired

By The American Geophysical Union
Science Daily
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Wildfires are not always purely destructive. In many forests, fire can clear out built up dead material, return nutrients to the soil, and help ecosystems reset. For more than 100 years, the United States has spent billions of dollars on fire suppression to protect people, homes, and sensitive environments. But putting out too many fires can also prevent landscapes from getting the burns they need, allowing extra fuel to accumulate and raising the risk of larger fires later. New research … reports that nearly 38 million hectares of land in the western United States are historically behind on burning. The researchers describe these areas as being in a “fire deficit.” …”Conditions are getting so warm and dry that it’s causing huge amounts of fire compared to the historical record,” said Winslow Hansen, director of the Western Fire and Forest Resilience Collaborative and scientist at Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies. 

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Western leaders demand probes into wildfire mitigation cuts

KNAU Arizona Public Radio
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©NPS Flickr

Several elected leaders from northern Arizona are calling on Attorney General Kris Mayes to determine if the Trump administration’s cuts to wildfire mitigation efforts are illegal. Coconino County Supervisor Lena Fowler, Tusayan Mayor Clarinda Vail and Flagstaff mayor Becky Daggett are among the 160 western officials who are concerned about the drop in federal fire preparedness in recent months. They signed onto a letter as part of the Mountain Pact, a group that advocates for western communities in climate, public lands and outdoor recreation policy. They are urging their respective state attorneys general to push back against layoffs, voluntary deferred resignations and early retirements within the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service and the National Park Service. It comes months after the Dragon Bravo and White Sage fires burned more than 200,000 acres on the Kaibab National Forest and in Grand Canyon National Park.

Additional coverage in the Aspen Times by Ryan Spencer: Colorado local elected leaders call on state attorney general to take action on ‘rapid decline of federal wildfire preparedness’ under Trump administration

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Rush to Avoid Red Tape Derails Logging Project Near Yellowstone

By Robert Chaney
The Mountain Journal
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Cutting red tape and streamlining project work have been marching orders for the U.S. Forest Service throughout the first year of the second Trump administration. Last week, a federal court ruling on a Greater Yellowstone landscape project showed how far those directives can backfire.  …Initially proposed in 2020, it received a decision notice in 2023. Opponents referred to it by its acronym, SPLAT, and promptly sued to block it. In his December 11 opinion, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy wrote that South Plateau failed to meet requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act, National Forest Management Act and Endangered Species Act. But he added the “primary challenge concerns the project’s conditions-based management approach.” Molloy generally agreed with the plaintiffs’ concern. “This approach,” he said, “conflates a promise of future statutory compliance with actual compliance.”

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Rainforest Action Network Resigns from the Forest Stewardship Council, Citing Loss of Credibility

Rainforest Action Network
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

San Francisco — Rainforest Action Network (RAN) has resigned from the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), ending more than 30 years of membership in the world’s most widely recognized forestry certification system. RAN says the FSC’s certification label is failing to provide credible assurances of responsible forest management. RAN was a founding member of FSC in 1993 and remained engaged for decades because of the need for a robust third party verified forestry certification scheme. The FSC previously set the gold standard for responsible forestry in a market flooded by timber and paper products bearing logos of weaker forest certification schemes such as the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification. But the organization says recent decisions by the FSC have fatally undermined its credibility.

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Massive wildfire reduction projects coming to Colorado forests, which could include logging

By Ishan Thakore
Colorado Public Radio News
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Two major U.S. Forest Service projects — authorized under federal emergency powers — will target up to around 308,000 acres of public land along the Front Range with treatments meant to reduce wildfire risk, including logging. That’s a massive area, around the total size of the city of Los Angeles. The projects, spread out over at least two decades, may include clear-cutting patches of national forest up to 20 acres, using prescribed burning to reduce timber that could fuel blazes, and spreading herbicide over thousands of acres. Completing those treatments may also require building temporary roads through thousands of acres of previously untouched forest — known as roadless areas. …The plans, and other Forest Service proposals, have drawn sharp criticism from some environmental groups, who say they encourage large-scale logging on public lands.

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Federal judge strikes down logging project near Yellowstone National Park

By Darrell Ehrlick
The Idaho Capital Sun
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

IDAHO — A federal judge halted a large logging project near Yellowstone National Park because he said the US Forest Service submitted plans that made it impossible to judge how it would affect critical grizzly bear habitat. The 16,500-acre project located in the Custer Gallatin National Forest would have allowed the US Forest Service to select timber and build roads for logging. But without offering specifics, the project only pledged that its plans would consider the total distance of the roads and not exceed certain parameters in acreage size, designed to protect critical bear habitat. However, Judge Donald Molloy said that the plans amounted to giving the Forest Service permission and trusting that it would be compliant later. He also said that the plans also made it difficult to judge how the logging project would impact grizzly habitat.

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Failure to harvest Alaska timber degrades both forest and economy

By Rep. Kevin McCabe
Alaska Watchman
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Kevin McCabe

There’s a narrative floating about that Alaska lacks merchantable timber, or that permits exist without wood to harvest. That claim is convenient for those who oppose active forest management, but it doesn’t hold up when examined against hard data or realities on the ground. …The path forward is not complicated, but it does require political will. Recent federal directives create opportunities to increase responsible timber production if agencies choose to act. That means active young-growth management in the Tongass, improved access and infrastructure in the Interior and regulatory reforms, including updates to plans such as the Chugach’s to incorporate sustainable timber objectives. It means addressing Roadless Rule barriers where appropriate, offering predictable and appropriately scaled timber sales, updating lumber grading standards for young-growth products, certifying small mills and building local processing capacity. …Alaska’s forestry challenge is not a shortage of trees. It is a shortage of policies that work.

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First lodgepoles, now ponderosas, Colorado is fighting beetles on multiple fronts

By Bente Birkeland
Colorado Public Radio News
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Gov. Jared Polis signed an executive order aimed at curbing a mountain pine beetle outbreak in ponderosa forests along the front range. Polis attributes the outbreak to drought, and a warming climate. He said he recently received a briefing and was shocked by the projections of how much the infestation is expected to spread. “This means that most or nearly all mature Ponderosa pines will be killed by pine beetles in the western front range over the next several years,” Polis said. …His executive order creates a task force to try to use the best science to coordinate a response with landowners, from counties and private individuals, to the state and federal government. …“It’s absolutely critical that we have mitigation to take down affected trees quickly,” Polis said. “Especially near residential areas, creating defensive barriers.” Polis said he is also concerned about the risk for wildfires, water quality, recreation, and the economy.

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150-year-old seed company in Washington helps reforest in the face of climate change

By Bellamy Pailthorp
Oregon Public Broadcasting
December 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Climate change is contributing to drier conditions in the Pacific Northwest, causing wildfires to become more intense and destructive. A growing reforestation industry has emerged in their wake. The company Silvaseed is a key player in the region. Based southeast of Olympia in Roy, Washington, Silvaseed collects, cleans, catalogues and preserves seeds. It also raises millions of seedlings every year in its greenhouses and fields. Customers include private timber companies, public land managers and tribal nations. …Inside a warehouse built in the 1940s, Silvaseed general manager Kea Woodruff starts a tour of the facilities by flipping a switch to fire up a huge, old kiln. …Woodruff said most species’ cones need the kiln to reach about 100 degrees Fahrenheit. …At every step of the way, as the seed gets refined and purified, the bags are meticulously labeled and tracked.

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In Oregon, America’s Top Christmas Tree Producer, She’s the Christmas Tree Grower’s Doctor

The Corvallis Advocate
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Priya Rajarapu

Priya Rajarapu works as a Christmas tree expert for Oregon State University’s Extension Service, helping Oregon’s 300-plus Christmas tree growers produce a healthy crop each holiday season so that the state can export millions of perfect trees across the world. An assistant professor in the College of Forestry, Rajarapu earned her doctorate in entomology, and is studying how to keep Oregon’s holiday industry thriving as the climate changes. …Oregon sold 3.17 million trees in 2023 – making it the top Christmas tree grower in the United States and contributing $118 million to Oregon’s economy. …Before his retirement, Rajarapu’s predecessor Chal Landgren established new species at the three-acre field site that she now oversees. For example, Nordmann and Turkish fir, both native to Georgia, now make up a small but growing percentage of Oregon’s crop. These species hold their needles longer after they’re cut. “They’re drought-and pest-tolerant,” Rajarapu said. “That reduces inputs such as chemical insecticides.”

Related content in Philomath News, by Mia Maldonado: Oregon researchers seek climate-resilient Christmas trees to protect state’s leading industry

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Abandon new Tongass management plan? Timber says yes, tribes say no ahead of meetings next week

By Mark Sabbatini
Juneau Independent
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Two meetings next week between U.S. Forest Service leadership and timber industry representatives in Southeast Alaska are raising concerns among tribal and other officials about the possibility a years-long revision of the management plan for the Tongass National Forest will be halted by the Trump administration. At least one additional meeting is now planned next week because of those concerns, scheduled next Friday in Juneau between Forest Service leaders and members of the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska, according to officials. A request to halt work on the revised plan is being made by the Alaska Forest Association, which states less than 10% of old-growth trees allotted to the timber industry in a 2016 revision of the plan have actually been authorized for harvest. The allocation of 430 million board feet (mmbf) was intended to support a 15-year industry transition to harvesting new-growth trees, according to AFA.

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The argument for letting Idaho manage federal lands in Idaho

By Russ Fulcher, R-Idaho
The Idaho Statesman
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Russ Fulcher

In Idaho, our public lands are a treasured part of our way of life, offering recreational opportunities, abundant resources, and natural beauty. Over 62% of the land within Idaho’s borders is controlled by the federal government. …This extensive federal government footprint poses significant challenges to our autonomy in issuing leases for timber, grazing, and mining. …After seven years in Congress, it is clear to me that the federal government — who is effectively our landlord — has failed to manage the lands wisely and has been derelict in working with state and local entities to reduce the risk of wildfires, provide the public with better access to natural resources, and address the overall health of our lands. …Last year, federal land mismanagement was a major factor in nearly one million acres of our beautiful Idaho going up in flames, a level of devastation that puts significant financial strain on our local economies. 

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It’s Time To Fix Wyoming’s Forests

By Jim Magagna and Travis Brammer
Cowboy State Daily
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Jim Magagna

Travis Brammer

America’s national forests were birthed in Wyoming in 1891, with the establishment of the Shoshone National Forest. At the 21st century’s quarter mark, however, our nation’s cherished forests are struggling. In 2024, Wyoming experienced its second-worst wildfire season on record, as more than 800,000 acres of forests burned. Nearly 20 percent of Wyoming’s public forests are at high or very high risk of a catastrophic wildfire, according to the Forest Service. Unless we do something, we can expect more years like 2024. We know how to fix this problem: mechanical thinning to remove excess fuels followed by regular use of prescribed fire and grazing to keep fuels in check. Yet it doesn’t happen. A study by the University of California-Davis and the Property and Environment Research Center found that the Forest Service treats only one percent of its land in Wyoming each year. Fortunately, Congress is on the cusp of passing bipartisan legislation to change that.

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Judge blocks massive logging project in southern Montana

By Edvard Pettersson
The Courthouse News
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A federal judge on Thursday vacated the U.S. Forest Service’s approval of a massive logging project [to harvest] about 16,500 acres of pine trees in the Custer Gallatin National Forest in southern Montana, just north of Yellowstone National Park. Senior U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula, Montana, agreed with a collective of environmental advocates that the U.S. Forest Service failed to meet the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act by relying on a condition-based management approach, which doesn’t identify the location of the 56.8 miles of temporary roads for the project and, as such, doesn’t adequately consider their impact on “secure habitat” for grizzly bears. Condition-based management defers specific decisions on how to proceed until the Forest Service has conducted field reviews. Here, it means the Forest Service has preliminarily identified areas as suitable for logging without identifying the precise location and size of the area to be cleared…

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Bill to place Quinault Indian Nation lands into trust passes house

The Daily World
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

WASHINGTON — On Tuesday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed two major bills for Washington state Tribes, the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe Project Lands Restoration Act, and the Quinault Indian Nation Land Transfer Act. Both bills initiate the first step to return land back to the Tribes by transferring ownership from the federal government to the Bureau of Indian Affairs to be held in trust for the benefit of the Tribes. [The bills were introduced into] legislation in April 2025. The bills now go to the Senate for consideration. “Today, we took an important step in upholding our treaty obligations by passing legislation to transfer land into trust for the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe and the Quinault Indian Nation,” said Rep. Randall. “I urge my colleagues in the Senate to quickly pass these two bills to ensure we meet our trust responsibilities to restore Tribal lands.”

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After nearly two-year lapse, Congress renews Secure Rural Schools funding

By Alex Baumhardt
The Alaska Beacon
December 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

After letting funding lapse for nearly two years, Congress voted to renew crucial federal funding that rural counties and schools have counted on for a quarter century. The U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday evening voted 399-5 to reauthorize the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act through September 2026, and to provide lapsed payments for the 2024 and 2025 fiscal years. The vote came after a year-long campaign led by bipartisan federal lawmakers from the West. The U.S. Senate in June unanimously voted to reauthorize the act. It now goes to the president to be signed into law. …Wyden co-authored the original law that provided tens of millions each year for rural schools and communities that previously benefited from revenue generated by natural resource industries on public lands. 

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Forest Service taps the brakes on wildfire defense across the west

By Jacob Smith
Hoodline San Jose
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A new analysis making the rounds on Capitol Hill says the U.S. Forest Service sharply scaled back prescribed burns, thinning and other fuel-reduction work this year, leaving far fewer acres treated than in recent years. Through the first nine months of 2025, the agency logged under 1.7 million acres of treatments, well below the roughly four-year average that wildfire experts say is needed to protect communities and watersheds. The drop-off has Democratic senators and veteran firefighters pressing the agency for staffing numbers and a concrete plan to catch up before next fire season. As reported by Times of San Diego, the data cited by lawmakers comes from an analysis compiled by Grassroots Wildland Firefighters that compares the January-September 2025 total to a roughly 3.6 million-acre annual average from 2021-2024. Senators circulated that tally in a letter demanding detailed staffing and mitigation plans from the Forest Service.

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The American West’s most iconic tree is disappearing

By Gary Ferguson
Phys.Org
December 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A profound unraveling is underway in the American Southwest, happening across a thousand-mile arc from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the central Sierra. In an unprecedented calamity, the most widely distributed, most iconic tree of the region—the beautiful ponderosa pine—is disappearing. …It was the ponderosa pine that more than 1,100 years ago allowed the rise of the first cities in what would later become the United States, providing structural beams for the multi-storied dwellings of the Ancestral Pueblo. …Since 2000, more than 200 million ponderosa have died. More alarming still is that many of those forests won’t be coming back, likely yielding the ground to what will be grass and shrublands for centuries to come. …The loss of forest will also mean much faster melting of the spring snowpacks, since the snow will no longer be shaded by trees.

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Couple donates 100‑acre tree farm to Washington State University Extension Forestry

By Angela Sams
WSU Insider
December 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Lynn & Becky Miner w/ Andy Perleberg

As Becky and Lynn Miner passed through northeastern Washington on a road trip to Canada in the 1970s, they were struck by the region’s beauty. Determined to someday retire in the area, the young newlyweds from Iowa pinched pennies for the next two decades, purchasing nearly 100 acres in Chewelah, Washington, in the early 1990s. After more than 30 years spent rehabilitating the poorly managed forest into a thriving, healthy wildlife refuge, the Miners have donated their Casa Becca del Norté tree farm to Washington State University Extension Forestry as a “legacy of learning.” …Representing WSU’s first school forest, the acreage includes a residential log cabin and outbuildings that will support education, training, demonstrations, research, conventions, and other learning opportunities. …“I’m excited by the endless possibilities,” said WSU Extension Forester Andy Perleberg, who has worked with the couple since 2006.

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As Conservation Groups Rally Support for Roadless Rule, Sen. Daines Pushes for Repeal

By Tristan Scott
The Flathead Beacon
December 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Despite a growing chorus of conservation advocates calling on Montana’s congressional delegates to defend roadless wildlands through permanent protections, a bill to do so seems unlikely to advance without Republican support, including that of U.S. Sen. Steve Daines. A Senate Energy and Natural Resources subcommittee on which Daines serves held a hearing Dec. 2 to consider a slate of 26 public lands and wildfire bills, among them a measure to enshrine the decades-old Roadless Rule into law. Re-introduced in June … the Roadless Area Conservation Act would protect nearly 60 million acres of national forestland. Although it has failed before, its supporters say this version comes at a pivotal moment as the Trump administration moves to roll back safeguards introduced in 2001. Hoping to capitalize on the bipartisan support that helped cleave a public land sale provision out of [the] One Big Beautiful Bill Act … conservation groups this week mounted a similar pressure campaign on Daines.

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Douglas County knows what forest inaction looks like

By Nick Smith, American Forest Resource Council
The News-Review
December 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Nick Smith

For years, anti-forestry groups have tried to convince the public that any effort to improve federal forest management threatens public lands. Now they claim that thinning hazardous fuels, removing dead and dying trees, or providing safe access for the public, firefighters, land managers, and local forest workers is the same as selling off the forest. That is not true. These efforts support and protect our forests and the communities who depend on them, not privatize them. Yet these same groups continue to promote a version of reality that ignores what is happening in our forests. They warn that improving management will somehow take away public lands while suing repeatedly to stop the forest health projects designed to reduce wildfire risks and restore the very landscapes they claim to defend. …In doing so, they defend a status quo that produces the same result year after year: more severe fires, more smoke…

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Governor Little signs historic agreement to increase management of Idaho forests

Idaho 6 News
December 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

BOISE, Idaho — Governor Brad Little joined U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz and Idaho Department of Lands Director Dustin Miller on Friday to renew and expand Idaho’s Shared Stewardship agreement with the federal government — a move aimed at increasing the pace and scale of forest management across the state. The updated agreement establishes a collaborative framework between the U.S. Forest Service and the State of Idaho to strengthen policies related to forest restoration, land management, and wildfire mitigation “across Idaho’s forests and nearby communities.” Building on the landmark 2018 Shared Stewardship agreement, the new plan deepens joint efforts to boost timber production, accelerate wildland restoration, and expand forest health projects on national forests and adjacent state and private lands. The partnership reaffirms each side’s commitment to proactive landscape management as fire seasons grow increasingly longer and more intense.

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

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

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

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Don’t trade salmon wealth for timber pennies

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

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

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Logging project thins trees to create, enhance grizzly bear habitat

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

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

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Loggers scrambling to keep projects on track

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

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

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Alaska timber industry says it needs more supply to survive

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

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

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

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

©USFS Flickr

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

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

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

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

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Logging advocate works to lead contrasting groups for sustainable forests

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

Bruce Vincent

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

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Forest History & Archives

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

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

Ralph Sidney Smith

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

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