Region Archives: US West

Business & Politics

Sierra Nevada Conservancy awards grant to Nevada County sawmill

Sierra Nevada Conservancy
December 13, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

At its September quarterly meeting, the Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) Governing Board awarded $1,544,950 to the Sierra Business Council for a wood-fired boiler for the Alpenglow Timber Sawmill near Truckee, CA. The Alpenglow Timber Sawmill was approved for construction by Nevada County in October with plans to complete construction and start operations by fall 2025. Restoring the forested landscapes of California’s Sierra-Cascade is at the heart of the Sierra Nevada Conservancy’s mission supporting the environmental, economic, and social well-being of the region, and in many parts of the region returning forests to resilience means removing small trees and brush. …The funds approved by SNC’s Board will contribute to the sawmill’s wood-fired boiler system that will provide heat used for winter kiln-drying and on-site commercial and residential needs. …The new sawmill will create economic value from restoration byproducts, while providing an environmentally superior alternative to trucking material long distances or pile-burning it on site.

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Boise Cascade expands its millwork business with the purchase of a Florida door shop

Boise Cascade Company
December 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Boise Cascade has purchased the assets of the Parksite door shop in Lakeland, Florida. Parksite currently has 22 locations, and this transaction involves their Florida door shop only. The remaining Parksite locations and products are not part of this agreement and will continue to be owned and operated by Parksite. The transaction was completed today. The Parksite Florida door shop offers a large selection of premium entry and decorative glass doors featuring Therma-Tru PrismaGuard premium finish options. Boise Cascade will continue operations there and plans to expand the offerings to include Simpson and interior flush and molded doors. Boise Cascade currently operates 14 millwork locations in some of the nation’s fastest-growing markets, specializing in exterior and interior doors, frames, hardware, and pre-finishing options. 

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B.C.’s resource boom winds down as $100B in projects near completion

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
December 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, US West

With the wind-down of construction activity on [four energy projects] B.C.’s most significant economic driver—the resource sector—is now poised for deceleration. …Don Wright, for Global Public Affairs… [said] one of the growth engines in B.C. over the last decade has been population and real estate. “That does bring money into the economy, but it’s not sustainable. …“If you want to build your economy, it is building high-quality sectors,” he said. “It is investing in resources.” But the resource sector in B.C. is not maximizing its potential. “I think it is broadly attributable to the fact that we have been constraining the resource sector, and we’re not having our exports grow along with the economy,” Wright said.  …Mina Lauden, VP for Canfor [said] “I was in Alberta recently, and they were talking about a two-to-three-month permitting window,” Lauden said. “We have about two to three years.”

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Roseburg Forest Products lays off 79 employees

By Drew Winkelmaier
The News-Review Today
December 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

RIDDLE, Oregon — Roseburg Forest Products laid off approximately 2.5% of its workforce across all North American locations early last month, while 120 positions are slated to be filled at Oregon facilities through 2026. “As we near the end of 2024, soft demand for wood products and broad-based pricing pressure continue to be a drag on our industry,” said Roseburg Forest Products spokesperson Sarah Smith in an email. “Looking into 2025, we do not expect near-term recovery in demand, and as a result, we are positioning to weather another challenging year.” Roseburg Forest Products manages 600,000 acres of timberland in Oregon, Virginia and North Carolina, according to the company website. Through the harvest of these timberlands, Roseburg Forest Products offers a variety of wood products including plywood, fiberboard and laminate products. …Smith said the move to eliminate these positions was a necessary one to cut “unnecessary costs.”

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Tariff threat from Trump would increase costs of Spokane homes

By Thomas Clouse
The Spokesman-Review
December 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

SPOKANE, Washington — Threats by President-elect Trump to impose sweeping new tariffs on the US’ top trading partners are revving up an old trade war that has pitted Washington, Oregon and Idaho foresters against Canada for more than 40 years. …It’s not clear whether that 25% tariff on lumber from Canada would cap at that amount or be added to the existing 14.5% tariff on those forest products. Regardless, it would make it more costly for Spokane-area residents to build a home, said Joel White, executive officer of the Spokane Home Builders Association. …Canada leads the world in production of forest products, which includes everything from raw lumber used for building to pulp used for making paper. The U.S. ranks second for world production, and Oregon and Washington lead the nation for where those trees are harvested. While both countries export forest products, they also represent the top importers of forest products from the other.

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What is a tariff and how does it work? Here’s what some experts say a tariff can cause

By Paris Barraza
Palm Springs Desert Sun in the Redding Record Searchlight
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

President-elect Donald Trump plans to implement a 25% tariff on all products from Mexico and Canada to target drugs, particularly fentanyl, and illegal immigration… Trump’s announcement of his plans has spurred questions about what tariffs mean for American consumers, as well as the products that may face additional fees. Oil and “billions worth of wood and paper” are imported from Canada to America, USA TODAY reported. …Congress has the authority to make U.S. tariff policy, and the legislative branch usually set tariff rates before the 1930s… However, Congress has “delegated extensive tariff-setting authority to the President” for decades. Through certain statutes, the president can impose or adjust tariffs, such as adjusting tariffs on imports that threaten U.S. national security or raise tariff rates when the U.S. International Trade Commission finds that an import surge has injured an American industry, according to the Congressional Research Service.

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Finance & Economics

Lane County approves extended tax break for Weyerhaeuser’s $120M sawmill upgrade

By Alan Torres
The Eugene Register-Guard
December 4, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

The Lane County Board of Commissioners voted Tuesday to approve a property tax exemption for Weyerhaeuser’s planned improvements to its Cottage Grove sawmill, a move officials say will help secure high-paying jobs in the region while ensuring the timber company remains competitive. Weyerhauser, a Seattle-based timber company, applied for the exemption to delay paying taxes on a planned $120 million upgrade to the sawmill, which it says currently employs 225 people. Under the agreement, Weyerhaeuser will save $7.2 million in property taxes over five years, but the company must make a 10% “community benefit payment,” which will be shared by the South Lane School District and the Cottage Grove Community Medical Center Foundation. Additionally, state law mandates Weyerhaeuser pay supplemental fees to the school district in the fourth and fifth years of the exemption.

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A look at how tariffs, deportations and more of Trump’s proposals could affect housing costs

By Casey Quinlan
The Idaho Capital Sun
November 28, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

Policymakers are looking out for indications of what President-elect Donald Trump plans to do to ease housing costs next year. …Trump has spoken frequently of his proposed 60% tariff on goods from China, which he has said would create more manufacturing jobs in the US. …But housing economists and other experts say that could be bad news for building more affordable housing. Selma Hepp, chief economist for CoreLogic, a financial services company, said tariffs are one of her main concerns about the effects of a second Trump term. “One of the biggest concerns is not just lumber [costs], but the overall cost of materials, which have been going up,” Hepp said. Kurt Paulsen, professor of urban planning in the department of planning and landscape architecture at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, said building costs are already high from tariffs on Canadian lumber.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Trex and Weyerhaeuser make westward partnership push

The HBS Dealer
December 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Trex Company is joining forces with Weyerhaeuser to expand Trex’s presence across the Southwest region. This collaboration aims to enhance access to the brand’s decking and railing products for customers in California, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico. Weyerhaeuser will now stock the complete range of Trex decking and railing products at strategically located distribution hubs … [and] will exclusively offer Trex decking and railing solutions in these regions. According to Trex, this collaboration aligns with the company’s strategic focus on expanding its market share in the residential railing segment. …Trex aims to double its share of the $3.3 billion residential railing market over the next five years… Ross Theilen, vice president of distribution at Weyerhaeuser, stated, “Trex is a leader in the industry, and their products align with our commitment to providing innovative, sustainable building materials. We’re thrilled to bring Trex’s premium offerings to our customers in California, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico.”

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Timberlab Named Innovator of the Year by the Portland Business Journal

By LMC staff
LBM Journal
December 9, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Each year the Portland Business Journal honors the region’s top manufacturing companies who drive the economy with innovation, excellence and productivity at the Makers & Manufacturers Awards 2024. The companies nominated shape the future and build what is needed for the next generation. At the event, Timberlab was named Innovator of the Year… “The mass timber terminal at PDX would not have been possible without the thousands of hands that helped bring this monumental structure to life. Our team is grateful to be part of a team of regional leaders and innovators committed to seeing this project achieve what was previously considered unachievable. Mass timber is here to stay, and this project will serve as a testament to the many benefits of building with local and sustainable building materials.”

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Google Unveils First Mass Timber Office, Cutting Building Emissions by 96%

ESG News
November 27, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Google has announced the opening of 1265 Borregas, its first office building constructed using mass timber, in Sunnyvale, California. The building reflects Google’s commitment to sustainability, employee wellbeing, and community engagement. …According to Google, 1265 Borregas produces 96% fewer embodied carbon emissions than an equivalent steel and concrete structure, considering sequestration. The mass timber was sourced from responsibly managed forests certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). …The building prioritizes employee wellbeing with biophilic design elements, such as exposed timber interiors, ample natural light, and expansive views of Northern California landscapes. …Google planted three acres of pollinator-friendly native plants around the site, including species like California sagebrush and common milkweed. …Mass timber construction also reduces construction waste, traffic, and noise, benefiting the surrounding community.

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National Museum of Forest Service History building will itself be an exhibit

By Peter Fabris
Building Design + Construction
December 2, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

The Conservation Legacy Center for the non-profit National Museum of Forest Service History in Missoula, Montana, aims to educate the public about the history and ongoing conservation work of the United States Forest Service (USFS). The building, now under construction, will itself be an exhibit. The facility will feature representative wood species found throughout the U.S., wood products developed with USFS Forest Products Lab, and an array of mass timber products including glulams, cross laminated timber (CLT), and Mass Plywood Panels (MPP). …The predominantly wood building provides a new focus on a sustainable way of building, comprising low embodied carbon, renewable materials, and carbon sequestration. …“The Conservation Legacy Center will demonstrate an encyclopedia of timber technologies, ranging from cutting-edge mass timber products and digital fabrication to traditional wood joinery and a ‘forest’ of 14 iconic wood species,” says Tom Chung, FAIA, LEED AP, BD+C, and principal-in-charge, Leers Weinzapfel Associates. 

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Forestry

Oregon timber industry presentation on housing affordability and fire resiliency

By Alan Torres
The Register-Guard
December 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

EUGENE, Oregon — While city councils are on holiday break, Lane County Commissioners are scheduled to meet this week to hear feedback and vote on a supplemental budget, hear a presentation from timber industry representatives on its efforts to improve housing affordability and fire resiliency, continue a hearing on three proposed homes in forested land near Oakridge and vote on a contract to provide mental health services in the Lane County Juvenile Justice Center. …County commission meetings stream at this link.

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Stimson Lumber and Idaho Dept of Lands announce 10,800-acre easement agreement

By Eric Welch
The Bonner County Daily Bee
December 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

In partnership with Stimson Lumber Company and the Idaho Department of Lands, nonprofit Trust for Public Land announced an easement agreement Wednesday that will protect 10,846 acres of working forests in Bonner and Boundary counties. Under the agreement, IDL holds the development rights to land owned and logged by Stimson Lumber Company, ensuring the easement areas will not be subdivided and will continue to contribute to the local timber industry. “By protecting over 10,000 acres of working forestland in northern Idaho, Trust for Public Land has ensured that these vital landscapes will be preserved for future generations,” said Trust for Public Land Northern Rockies Director Dick Dolan. …IDL Director Dustin Miller and Stimson Lumber Company President Andrew Miller expressed their commitment to preserving working forests in the area and protecting the longevity of Idaho’s timber industry. 

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Oregon Legislature approves spending $218 million to cover unpaid wildfire bills

By Dianne Lugo
The Salem Statesman Journal
December 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon lawmakers meeting in a special session Thursday approved spending $218 million to pay off hundreds of unpaid invoices from contractors who worked during the historic 2024 wildfire season. …The Senate voted 25-2 in favor and the House voted 42-2. The bill specifically directs $191.5 million from the general fund to the Oregon Department of Forestry and $26.5 million to the Oregon Department of the State Fire Marshal. …Some Republicans blamed the extent of the wildfires on what they called “mismanagement” of the state forests. …Sen. Lynn Findley, R-Vale called on the head of the Department of Forestry, Cal Mukumoto, to resign, saying the special session was an indication of a failure “on every level” from the agency to communicate the issue in a timely manner. …Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek’s proposed budget recommends redirecting $150 million to the Department of Forestry and State Fire Marshal for the two-year budget that begins July 1.

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Helping smokejumpers to predict wind turbulence

By David Bruce
Wildfire Today
December 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Wind turbulence is a well-known factor in the complex wildland fire environment. Sometimes it is the wind shear over vegetation, buildings, or terrain, and other times it’s the buoyant forces from solar surface heating or thermal plume injections from the fire itself. For a smokejumper, parachuting from a low-flying aircraft in a remote and rugged landscape, turbulence near the ground at the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) is of particular concern. Scientists at the Rocky Mountain Research Station have published a study on how to better predict terrain-induced turbulence to assist smokejumper operations. …This study concluded that WindNinja’s lesser-known ability to simulate wind turbulence could be of use for assessing smokejumper operations under moderate to high wind conditions. They also suggest that although this work focused on smoke jumping, real-time turbulence predictions from WindNinja could be useful for other near-surface firefighting aerial operations.

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Explaining Oregon’s problem paying for wildfire work

By April Ehrlich and Dirk VanderHart
Oregon Public Broadcasting
December 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon lawmakers will convene Thursday for a brief emergency session related to this year’s record-setting wildfire season. At the heart of the session are hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid bills owed to the workers who helped put out blazes… This year, wildfire touched over 1.9 million acres, making it Oregon’s most destructive fire season in modern times in terms of acres burned… In the end, Oregon spent a whopping $350 million fighting fires across the state… The Oregon Department of Forestry can usually pay contractors within a couple of months. But this year’s costs far exceeded what the state had on hand as it awaited federal reimbursements. The federal government helps pay for wildfires through disaster funds and reimburses the state whenever Oregon lends firefighting support on federally managed fires. But it can take years for those federal dollars to make their way to Oregon.

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Spruce budworm outbreak in northern Maine has forestry experts worried

By Lori Valigra
Bangor Daily News
December 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Some 250,000 acres of Maine fir trees are at risk of defoliation from a moth that could cause millions of dollars of harm to the state’s economy if ignored, forestry experts said during a webinar Wednesday. The spruce budworm is an emerging threat that has already been spotted in Aroostook County near the Canadian border earlier this year, affecting some 3,500 acres of trees, according to the University of Maine Cooperative Extension. Forestry experts worry that the spruce budworm could spread quickly and damage up to 250,000 acres of Maine’s forests next year. As part of a webinar sponsored by the Maine State Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday, they recommended early intervention with aerial pesticide spraying starting in May.

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Oregon lawmakers to vote on funds to pay off debts for historic 2024 wildfire season

By Dianne Lugo and Zach Urness
The Register-Guard
December 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon lawmakers meeting in a special session Thursday will vote on spending $218 million in general funds to pay off bills for the estimated $350 million in firefighting costs during the historic 2024 wildfire season that burned more than 1.9 million acres. The money would allow the state to process the remaining payments to vendors and allow the Department of Forestry and the State Fire Marshal to continue program operations through the end of the two-year budget cycle on June 30. “We have a responsibility to pay our bills to the brave individuals who helped protect our homes and property during this terrible wildfire season,” Senate President Rob Wagner, D-Lake Oswego, said in a statement. “A narrow special session focused on this common goal is the best path forward.”

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Forestry research expands at Washington State University Vancouver; new efforts could make a dent in illegal logging

By Brianna Murschel
The Daily News
December 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Marc Kramer

A new five-year partnership between Washington State University Vancouver and the U.S. Forest Service will give graduate and undergraduate students the opportunity to study wood and soil alongside professors and government scientists. The partnership will establish labs to study the relationship between soils, the local climate and the trees supported by the soil using stable isotope and trace element analysis. “It’s to find new ways, better ways, to identify illegal wood that’s coming into the United States,” said Christine Portfors, vice chancellor for research and graduate education. “This is a really unique opportunity to have scientists who work with the U.S. Forest Service on campus.” …Marc Kramer leads the organic geochemistry and stable isotope laboratory at the university. …“We’re providing new methods to help verify the origin of wood,” Kramer said. “ …Kramer said he anticipates the lab will run the first set of samples in early 2025.

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Conservation groups file suit challenging Bitterroot Forest Plan

By Jackson Kimball
Billings Gazette
December 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

After issuing a 60-day intent to sue in September, nonprofit environmental law group Earthjustice filed a formal complaint against federal agencies involved in the Bitterroot National Forest Plan. The complaint, filed on Tuesday, criticizes the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Forest Service and the Bitterroot National Forest for failure to follow guidelines enforced by the Endangered Species Act and seeks to rule the plan as unlawful. …The lawsuit centers around the Bitterroot Forest Plan amendments’ erasure of road density limitations and how potential new road construction could impact grizzly bear and bull trout population in the Bitterroot. …Jim Miller, president of the Friends of the Bitterroot, told the Ravalli Republic in September that road densities in the Bitterroot Forest are “probably the biggest contributor to stream sedimentation, harming trout fisheries.”

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Students and scientists collaborate to maintain Navajo Nation forests

By Mark Degraff
Mongabay
December 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Arizona – Surviving desert heat, alpine cold, and meager rainfall each year, two-needle pinyon pines (Pinus edulis) are the backbone of many forests in the southwestern United States. Their stout branches offer shade for bighorn sheep and sagebrush lizards, while their yearly crop of nuts has nourished humans for millennia. But 150 years of grazing, fire suppression, and other land-use changes have transformed these forests. In many areas, thickets of young trees are choking out woodlands once dominated by widely spaced pines more than a century old. … To help restore the traditional ecology of these dry woodlands, Arizona researchers worked with undergraduate students to remove the dense growths of saplings on land used by Navajo ranchers. …The researchers removed nearly two-thirds of the trees in the forest by thinning most pinyons with a trunk diameter under 25 centimeters…

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Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, Flathead National Forest partner to reduce wildfire risk

NBC Montana
December 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

KALISPELL, Mont. — The Flathead National Forest and the Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation are working together to reduce wildfire risk through the Jackknife Project. The project is made possible by the Good Neighbor Authority, which allows the two agencies to plan and coordinate forest management projects. A Eureka company, Stoken Logging will harvest about 800 trees per acre and will leave about 100 to 250 trees per acre as part of a timber sale. The project spans over 1,000 acres on Good Creek Road and the harvest will allow residual trees to have more access to light water and nutrients. The reduction in trees will reduce the ability of wildfires to reach the top of trees, known as a crown fires.

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Tree mortality surveys are out: What they mean for Lake Tahoe

By Katelyn Weish
Tahoe Daily Tribune
December 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

GREATER LAKE TAHOE AREA, California – Each year aerial observers for the USDA Forest Service ride in small fixed-wing aircraft… looking for the yellow or red-brown of dried or discolored foliage. It’s their job to observe, survey and report conifer and hardwood mortality, defoliation, and other damage. They also note several other factors, including the damage type, affected forest area percentage and severity, impacted tree species, as well as the probable damage-causing agent. …Forest land managers use the annual mortality data to plan harvests in order to salvage recently killed trees or trees in beetle-threatened areas before the beetles can get to them. Others use it for research, fire behavior forecasting, invasive insect and disease monitoring and much more. …This year, observers recorded 439,000 acres of mortality, which is less than the five-year annual average of 730,000 acres. …The aerial survey reports are available publicly on the Forest Service’s website

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J.P. Morgan’s Campbell Global Acquires over 40,000 acres of Timberland in the US Pacific Northwest

By J.P. Morgan Asset Management
PR Newswire
December 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

J.P. Morgan Asset Management announced that institutional investors advised by the firm’s wholly-owned timber investment manager, Campbell Global, have led the acquisition of 40,800 productive acres of high-quality, commercial timberland located on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state. The firm has named the property Tyee to acknowledge the Cascadia region’s indigenous Native American history. Campbell Global was acquired by J.P. Morgan Asset Management in 2021 and is recognized as a pioneer in timberland management, having managed more than five million acres worldwide for pension funds, foundations and other institutional investors since inception. Tyee will be continuously managed for both carbon capture and timber production to meet growing demand for sustainable building products and other uses. Some details of the property include 100% certified in accordance with Sustainable Forestry Initiative standards.

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State and federal partners take innovative approaches to fire prevention and community resilience in Alaska

Alaska Wildland Fire Information
December 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

There’s a whole lot of partnering going on in Alaska. The Alaska Region is known for its authentic relationships with local, state, tribal and other federal agencies and communities of all sizes. That same dedication to collaboration is evident in the realm of fire protection. This September, Forest Service employees and staff from the State of Alaska, Division of Forestry & Fire Protection toured Alaska to see how federal funding is making impactful, local changes in fire prevention and community resilience. These efforts demonstrate a successful collaboration between the agency and partners such as local fire departments, boroughs, and the state, showcasing how partnerships can protect communities from wildfire hazards. …The tour included visits to six woody debris disposal sites …The partnership displayed through these federal and state programs highlight the power of collaboration, innovation, and the lasting impact of federal funding in building fire-adapted communities across Alaska.

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Can Old-Growth Forest Survive a Timber Bias?

By Jim Furnish, retired Deputy Chief of the U.S. Forest Service
The Sierra Club Magazine
December 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

I retired in 2002 as deputy chief of the US Forest Service with 35 years of experience, and I was stunned, happily, when President Biden unveiled Executive Order 14072… though, an immediate question arose: “Will the White House tell the Forest Service how to implement it or ask them?” My experience told me that unless the administration’s environmental overseers kept the Forest Service on a very tight leash, the Forest Service would likely do as little as possible for as long as possible. My question arises because when it comes to protecting… old-growth forests, the US Forest Service has proved a begrudging landlord. …Where do we stand, knowing the Trump team will surely kill any policy aimed at protecting forests? …I suggest the Forest Service suspend action and allow their policy to remain, unfinished, for now. Do not give Trump or this Congress an opportunity to kill it.

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With Climate Change Intensifying, California Launches Initiative to Fill Forestry Jobs

By Selen Ozturk
Dateline USA via Asian Journal News
December 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

As California’s wildlife crisis deepens amid forester job shortages, the state has launched a new initiative to build up its forestry ranks. California has 33 million acres of forest land; for the 4 million of these that are highly managed, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) has launched the California Forestry Sector Jobs Initiative to recruit workers, particularly from underrepresented communities, to fill about 1,000 forestry jobs. These jobs, ranging across vocational and educational levels, include logging, manufacturing, engineering, bioenergy production, forest management, mapping, park guiding, environmental analysis, biology, accounting, HR, electrical work and distribution driving… Calforests, representing the state’s private forestry business sector, received a CAL FIRE grant to carry out the jobs initiative.

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‘Project Pinecone’ raising money to help restore forest destroyed by Wapiti Fire

By Jude Binkley
KTVB 7
December 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

BOISE, Idaho — One of the most treasured parts of the Gem State is its outdoors, but a devastating wildfire season wrecked havoc on many forests – including the Sawtooth National Forest near Stanley. The Wapiti Fire burned about 130,000 acres of the area’s landscape. The Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) are coming together to help restore the forest. The service organization is tied together by their love of Idaho’s lands – and their connection to patriots of the American Revolution. …Forest officials weren’t able to collect enough pinecones to restore the 130,000 acres that were burned in the fire, so the Daughters of the American Revolution are fundraising to hire expert pinecone pickers to harvest mature pinecones to grow the seedlings needed to replant trees. …Harvested pinecones will be taken to the Lucky Peak Nursery to be turned into seedlings that become trees that will be replanted. 

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Reyes Peak ruling upheld: Environmental groups lose appeal over forest-thinning project on Pine Mountain

By Alex Wilson
Ventura County Reporter
December 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld a lower court’s ruling to allow a controversial forest thinning project on Pine Mountain to proceed. Los Padres National Forest (LPNF) officials say the work will help with wildfire prevention and control, while environmental groups lament the destruction of mature trees near popular campgrounds and rock-climbing areas north of Ojai. Several government agencies, environmental groups and local businesses raised concerns about the U.S. Forest Service plan, including the Ojai City Council, Ventura County Board of Supervisors, Los Padres ForestWatch, Keep the Sespe Wild and Ventura-based outdoor apparel company Patagonia, which helped lead a public-awareness campaign on the issue. In 2022, the coalition filed lawsuits against the U.S. Forest Service, arguing the logging and chaparral-clearing project would violate environmental laws, harm vulnerable wildlife and cause irreparable damage to intact roadless areas. It also claimed the project went against scientific evidence regarding fire ecology.

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Forests will burn but then logging them right after delays recovery

By Casey Kulla
The Oregon Capital Chronicle
December 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — The fires that burned down the Santiam Canyon over Labor Day weekend in 2020 were a disaster for the communities from Idanha all the way to Stayton. Recovery started right away, but rebuilding homes and public infrastructure has been tragically slow, delaying the healing of the community. Likewise in the burned forests; healing started right away, but logging those burned forests delayed healing. Oregon forests… need fire to be healthy. …When we tend a forest, log it or choose not to tend it, we accept (maybe unconsciously or without really thinking about it) that there’s a chance it will burn. Sure, when the fire does come, it might burn bright and consume everything or it might burn with a light touch, knowing it will come back again. …It is what happens in the forest afterwards that’s up to us. …decision-makers need to stop peeling the scab and end rampant post-fire logging. 

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U.S. government sues group that fenced off Colorado national forest land with barbed wire

By Lauren Penington
The Denver Post
November 27, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A group that attempted to claim ownership of 1,460 acres of national forest land in Colorado by fencing it off with barbed wire last month is being sued by the United States government. According to court records, the government is suing Patrick Pipkin, Brian Hammon and all “unknown individuals” associated with the Free Land Holder Committee who helped fence off public land. Hammon told The Denver Post that Free Land Holders are members of The United States of America Republic. They do not acknowledge the U.S. government, nor the authority of the president, Congress, governors, sheriffs and other elected officials… “Public lands belong to all of us, not to any individual person or group,” acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Colorado Matt Kirsch said in the release.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

The Climate Trust Named Recipient of Two U.S. Forest Service Grants Totaling $7 million

By The Climate Trust
PR Newswire
December 13, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND, Oregon — This past Wednesday, The Climate Trust was awarded two grants from the U.S. Forest Service totaling nearly $7 million through the Biden-Harris Administration’s Inflation Reduction Act. These funds will support The Climate Trust’s pioneering work in the carbon market, extending opportunities to climate vulnerable and underserved landowners while incentivizing climate-smart forest practices. A $2 million award will fund The Climate Trust’s Tribal Reservation Allotment Carbon Enrollment (TRACE) program, that will pilot the development of a replicable forest carbon project that aggregates small parcels owned by or held in trust for individual Tribal members. “To date, no carbon projects include allotment lands because it has been too challenging to aggregate them. The Dawes Act of 1887 broke up large areas of Tribal lands into small allotments that face significant obstacles to carbon market inclusion because of their small size, fractionated ownerships, and bureaucratic hurdles to decision making,” said TCT’s Forest Carbon Manager, Madeline Montague.

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Protect Washington’s forests from being turned into pellets for energy

By Editorial Board
The Seattle Times
December 8, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE — A pair of proposals to build wood pellet-manufacturing plants in Hoquiam and Longview would bring a growing but controversial global industry to Washington. Countries including the U.K. and Japan have subsidized the burning of such pellets to produce electricity. …But of concern is the industry’s operations elsewhere have revealed the use of whole logs, and even old growth forests in British Columbia, to manufacture them. …Drax and other wood pellet producers in the southeastern U.S. also vowed to use residual materials. But the Southern Environmental Law Center estimates that at least 100,000 acres of trees in the American south have been harvested for wood pellets. …The Times editorial board supports active management of working forestlands to improve their health, prevent wildfire and supply critical material for everything from utility poles to affordable housing. …But state leaders should be wary of these past examples. [to access the full story a Seattle Times subscription is required]

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Biochar may be climate-friendly aid to agriculture

By Chuck Hassebrook, National Center for Appropriate Technology
Spokane Journal of Business
December 5, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

There aren’t many climate solutions that unite Republicans and Democrats in Congress. But there is one topic that does: biochar. It draws bipartisan support among policy makers and support across the farm community because it’s a practical way to improve soil health, increase agricultural yields, open new markets, conserve water, and create economic opportunities across rural America, as it addresses climate change. There aren’t many climate solutions that unite Republicans and Democrats in Congress. But there is one topic that does: biochar. It draws bipartisan support among policy makers and support across the farm community because it’s a practical way to improve soil health, increase agricultural yields, open new markets, conserve water, and create economic opportunities across rural America, as it addresses climate change. …Biochar is the most cost-effective way to remove carbon from the atmosphere, with the added benefits of enhancing agricultural productivity, decreasing irrigation requirements, and strengthening rural economies. 

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Colorado’s first biomass energy plant closed, set for auction as owner files for bankruptcy protection

By Jason Blevins
The Colorado Sun
December 4, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

The biomass plant in Gypsum — the first in the state to convert beetle-kill trees into electricity — has shut down and its owner has filed for bankruptcy protection citing more than $40 million in debt. The closure has terminated wildfire mitigation efforts in Colorado’s forests and reveals the growing struggle of burning biomass for electricity as demand grows for more affordable renewable energy options like solar and wind. The highest bidder for the plant … is an Illinois-based real estate firm. The trustee in charge of the sale said the Urban Investment Research Corp. and the commercial real estate owner would not renew a contract to sell electricity to Holy Cross Energy. “This is a huge hit to our forests, forest health, wildfire mitigation, watershed protection and water quality in our communities on the Western Slope,” said Kendric Wait, of Forest Range Products, the company hired to mitigate wildfire threats and supply the plant with biomass.

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Health & Safety

Lawsuit claims Southern Oregon forestry companies failing foreign workers

By Justin Higginbottom
OPB News
December 2, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

A lawsuit filed earlier this month by former forestry worker Joaquin Barraza-Cortes seeks over $42 million in damages from Ponderosa Reforestation, Ponderosa Timberland and Pine West Reforestation. The complaint accuses those Rogue Valley forestry companies, which hire foreign workers through the H-2B visa program, of a litany of safety violations including not providing proper training and protective equipment. In 2022, Barraza-Cortes was hired as a foreign seasonal worker for tree thinning work within the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest. While using a chainsaw, without formal training according to the lawsuit, he was severely injured by a falling tree limb, resulting in a spinal cord injury. The complaint claims that Barraza-Cortes has since been unable to work or care for himself. Barraza-Cortes’ former employer, Ponderosa Timberland, declined to comment on the lawsuit.

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Wildfire smoke increases risk of dementia, UW study finds

By Conrad Swanson
The Seattle Times in the Spokesman-Review
November 27, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE – The wildfire smoke that blankets much of the American West each summer is likely more harmful than previously understood, especially to older people, scientists found. Research announced this week, and led by scientists at the University of Washington, discovered that prolonged exposure to the ultrafine particles in wildfire smoke heightens the risk of dementia for those 60 and older. …Joan Casey, an environmental epidemiologist at the University of Washington said, not only are older people at risk with the increasing exposure to wildfire smoke, but so too are those who can’t access air quality warnings, afford filtration or avoid outdoor exposure throughout the fire season. Casey partnered with scientists from the University of Pennsylvania, Columbia University, the University of California in San Diego, Los Angeles and San Francisco. …Dementia isn’t the only risk associated with wildfire smoke. Those with prolonged exposure could also suffer from respiratory or cardiovascular problems.

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Forest Fires

Firefighters work to contain Franklin Fire as weather cools

By Julia Gomez
USA Today
December 15, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

MALIBU, California — The Malibu wildfire continues to threaten over 1,000 structures as firefighters work to gain control of it, officials said. The wildfire, known as the Franklin Fire, has destroyed 19 structures and damaged 27. It threatens 1,025 structures Sunday as 4,037 acres are set ablaze in Malibu, California, located around 29 miles west of Los Angeles, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire.) The fire had threatened over 4,300 structures Saturday. Firefighters have progressed in containing the fire, as cooler temperatures and higher humidity levels have assisted them in their efforts. As of Sunday morning, firefighters have contained 42% of the wildfire, according to Cal Fire. Evacuation orders have been lifted in some areas, and people were able to return to their homes.

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Utah’s largest wildfire of the year wasn’t all devastation

By David Jackson
The Park Record
December 4, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

Much of October was a smoky existence along the Wasatch Back while the largest wildfire of the year in Utah burned 33,000 acres of national forest laced with beetle-killed timber east of Frances almost to Hanna. Before unseasonably warm and dry weather gave way to snow, the Yellow Lake Fire burned for a month and a half, from Sept. 28 to Nov. 12. But inside the fire perimeter, nearly 7,300 acres did not burn at all, and no structures burned, either. “That was because of where it was, and the weather patterns during the fire,” said Ken Verboncoeur, the Heber-Kamas district ranger for the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest. …So far, the Forest Service has not noticed any significant loss of wildlife in the fire zone. Because the area has numerous patches of meadows and open areas, and the fire was largely a patchy or mosaic pattern, the belief is that animals used these open areas as safe zones.

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