Region Archives: US West

Business & Politics

The Forest Service Is Coming to Utah: What It Means for the State, Its Businesses, and Public Lands Management

By Dorsey & Whitney LLP
JD Supra Business Advisor
April 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

On March 31, USDA announced that the U.S. Forest Service will relocate its headquarters from Washington, D.C. to Salt Lake City, bringing roughly 260 positions and the agency’s top leadership to the Intermountain West. For Utah, a state with more than 8 million acres of national forest land and a $12.3 billion outdoor recreation economy, this is a significant development. The relocation does not arrive in a vacuum. In January 2026, Utah finalized a 20-year cooperative agreement with the Forest Service giving the state a substantially larger role in managing its national forests, covering decisions about logging, grazing, recreation, wildlife, and forest restoration. The Forest Service’s Intermountain Regional Office has been based in Ogden for decades. That office will close under the reorganization, but the new national headquarters in Salt Lake City places an even higher level of decision-making authority in the state.

Read More

Kimberly Clark Warehouse Destroyed by Fire in Ontario, California; Employee Arrested

By Janet Freund, Redd Brown, and Andrea Chang
Bloomberg Industries
April 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

ONTARIO , California — A Kimberly-Clark Corp. employee has been arrested on arson charges after a massive fire broke out Tuesday morning at a California distribution center that serves around 50 million people. The 1.2 million-square-foot facility — located in Ontario, about 35 miles outside of Los Angeles — houses facial tissue and toilet paper, according to a local Fox report. Ontario Deputy Fire Chief Mike Wedell said the building’s roof completely collapsed and all products inside were destroyed. …The blaze reached a six-alarm response, involving around 175 firefighters. The fire was contained to the building of origin. …The department also said it had identified a suspect: Chamel Abdulkarim, an employee of NFI Industries, a third-party logistics provider for Kimberly-Clark products. …Kimberly-Clark said that there were no reported injuries. The company’s shares fell 4.1% on Tuesday. Analysts warned that the fire could lead to supply problems in the region.

Read More

Emergency crews respond to explosion at Weyerhaeuser plant in Columbia Falls

KPAX Missoula & Western Montana
April 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

COLUMBIA FALLS, Montana — Emergency crews have cleared the scene at Weyerhaeuser in Columbia Falls after an explosion started a fire at the plant Saturday morning. Columbia Falls Fire Chief Karl Weeks told MTN the department was dispatched to the MDF plant on Mills Drive at 6:40 a.m. due to an explosion. Heavy smoke was coming out of the west side of the building, according to Weeks. Several agencies were called in to help including Whitefish, Bad Rock, Evergreen, and Three Rivers. No injuries were reported in the explosion, which is still under investigation. A cause has not yet been determined. Fire crews cleared the scene at 2:46 p.m. Saturday. Cleanup was turned over to Weyerhaeuser. Weeks said Saturday’s incident is not connected to another explosion in February 2025 at the plant. That explosion was caused by an electrical issue.

Read More

Washington state timber industry buffeted by regulations, trade war

By Megan Boyanton
The Seattle Times in the Chronicle
April 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

WASHINGTON — Countless logging trucks rumbled through timber country, their drivers headed toward Hampton Lumber’s sawmill in Morton. …”We take our logs and get every bit out of it that we possibly can. And we replant,” said plant superintendent Tony Gillispie. “We want this to last for hundreds of years.” But will Washington’s timber industry overcome its ongoing slump and endure for centuries? Myriad issues are at play, with fingers pointing in every direction. The private sector, which harvests the majority of Washington’s wood, feels squeezed by policies restricting its access to state trust lands in the fight against climate change. …Meanwhile, the state government points to the residual effects of trade wars, particularly with China, after Washington’s exports of forest products hit a 21-year low in 2025. Local demand for lumber has also dropped in line with the recent slowdown in construction activity across the state.

Read More

U.S. Forest Service to close Portland headquarters, research station, open Salem office

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

The U.S. Forest Service plans to close a century-old Portland-based forest research station and a regional U.S. Forest Service headquarters but open a new federal office in Salem in a massive restructuring of the federal agency. The movements are part of a broad plan Forest Service officials announced Tuesday to move the agency operations westward, including shifting headquarters in Washington, D.C., to Salt Lake City. Officials will also close all nine regional Forest Service offices across the country, including the Northwest office in Portland, and consolidate seven state-based research stations, including the 100-year-old Pacific Northwest Research Station, also in Portland, into a single research station in Fort Collins, Colorado. Smaller Forest Service research and development facilities in Corvallis and La Grande that are associated with the Pacific Northwest Research Station will remain open.

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

American Forest & Paper Association disappointed following court decision

By Simon Matthis
Pulp Paper News
April 15, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

American Forest & Paper Association President and CEO Heidi Brock commented following the court’s decision to deny AF&PA’s motion to join the challenge to Oregon’s Recycling Modernization Act: “We are disappointed by the court’s decision denying our motion to join the challenge to Oregon’s Recycling Modernization Act. While we respectfully disagree with the ruling, AF&PA remains fully committed to pursuing all available legal and strategic options to protect our members’ interests. As Oregon’s program moves into implementation, it is becoming clear that the law imposes significant and unnecessary burdens on paper products that are already among the most successfully recycled materials in the United States. …We will continue working closely with partners and counsel to secure meaningful relief for our members and ensure that recycling policies are workable, fact-based and do not increase costs across the supply chain for businesses and consumers alike.”

Read More

Roseburg’s newspaper will stop printing after 159 years, shutter the newsroom

By Mike Rogoway
The Oregonian
April 8, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

The News-Review newspaper in Roseburg notified staff this week that it will stop printing and shutter its newsroom, the latest casualty in the long decline of local journalism. “Due to declining revenue, increasing print costs, and broader industry decline nationwide, The News-Review has reached a level of unsustainability that we can no longer overcome. As a result, The News-Review will be shutting down in its current form at the end of April,” the paper’s owner wrote. “As part of this transition, the editorial department will be discontinued and The News-Review brand will sunset”. The newspaper’s website lists 15 employees. …The News-Review traces its roots to the founding of the Roseburg Ensign in 1867. It took its current name in 1920, with the merger of the Umpqua Valley News and Roseburg Review. The paper serves a community south of Eugene that has been struggling for decades amid the protracted decline of Oregon’s timber industry.

Read More

Lumber grading training goes digital – the Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau debuts an online learning portal

The HBS Dealer
April 1, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

As with any other natural resource, building with wood starts with ensuring each piece is up to snuff. And while there are machines to help vis-a-vis bots spotting knots, human eyes and judgement remain essential.  To help expand that human portion of the grading project, the Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau (PLIB) has rolled out the Fundamentals of Lumber Grading. The online portal offers training modules designed to get lumberyards and mills up to speed on the basics of grading lumber, though PLIB says the course is an “ideal training tool for anyone involved in buying, selling or trading lumber.”  The course also may be useful for architects, engineers, specifiers or code officials. Really, anyone who wants to acquire the skills needed to sort the “wheat from the chaff” regarding what constitutes code-compliant boards. PLIB’s curriculum covers National Grade Rule standards for studs, light framing, structural light framing, and joists and planks.

Read More

The Government Building That Refuses to Be Disposable

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

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

Read More

Forestry

US House Dems condemn Forest Service cuts as Republicans cheer agency’s move West

By Annie Knox
Utah News Dispatch
April 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

U.S. House Republicans from Western states laid out a figurative welcome mat for the U.S. Forest Service Thursday as its chief pitched plans to whittle down the agency’s budget, move its headquarters to Salt Lake City and rely more heavily on states to manage millions of acres. “I think it’s very interesting what you’re proposing to do, and I support it,” said Idaho Republican Rep. Mike Simpson, chair of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies. Democrats on the budget panel grilled Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz about how billions of dollars in cuts to the agency proposed by President Donald Trump could drive up costs for states and stamp out important research. The subcommittee’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Chellie Pingree of Maine, said she’s deeply worried.

Read More

Crews race to clear wildfire fuels in Southern Oregon before the start of a hot, dry summer

By Justin Higginbottom
Jefferson Public Radio
April 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A dry winter has forecasters predicting a potentially active fire season in Oregon. Federal agencies are trying to minimize the threats from large wildfires by first clearing fuels near communities. Chainsaws were buzzing along Grants Pass’ Cathedral Hills Trail System this week, part of a 240-acre fuels reduction project meant to reduce the risk of wildfire amid warnings from climatologists. Grayback Forestry cut down small-diameter trees — below 8 inches for hardwoods like oak — and piled the timber to be dried out and burnt in the fall. Sean Hendrix, base manager at Grayback, said that while the trees are too wet to burn now without producing large amounts of smoke, they should be wetter. Oregon is coming off a dry winter and record-low snowpack. “In fire and fuels we talk about fuel moisture,” he said. “Live fuel moisture just three weeks ago, they were 60%. In the middle of May they should be 160% saturated.”

Read More

Forest Service Develops ‘Sustained Yield’ Aimed at Propping up Montana’s Flagging Timber Industry

The Mountain Journal
April 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MONTANA — After the US Forest Service unveiled a proposal last month to give Montana’s lumber industry a “predictable” timber supply from three national forests, questions about the agency’s plan to incorporate an 82-year-old law into a modern forest-management framework abounded. Broadly speaking, the Tri-Forest Federal Sustained Yield Unit would direct the Helena-Lewis and Clark, Beaverhead-Deerlodge and Custer Gallatin national forests to supply local businesses with at least 35 million board feet of timber per year. The Forest Service is pitching the proposal as a tool to sustain local economies and encourage investment in the lumber industry for the 22-county region included in the unit. It’s necessary, the agency says, because the closure of the Pyramid Mountain Lumber sawmill and the Roseburg Wood Products facility have demonstrated the industry’s vulnerability. But at a recent hearing the Forest Service hosted in Helena, the proposal drew a mixed reception.

Read More

Heat waves and record-low snowpack boosts wildfire risk

By Peter Aleshire
The Payson Roundup
April 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ARIZONA — Rim Country and the White Mountains are not alone in bracing for the 2026 fire season, which is approaching. A national April-to-July forecast shows nearly the entire Western United States faces an above-normal risk of wildfires over the next four months. Fire officials said two weeks of cloudy weather with scattered rain showers have given Northern Arizona some breathing room, but the lack of snowpack and above-normal temperatures will still result in an early start to the fire season. The National Interagency Coordination Center predicted above-normal fire threat in every Western state at some point between now and summer. Much of the Southwest faced high-risk conditions during an unusually warm March, and those hazardous conditions are expected to expand into other Western states this month. Forecasters point to record-low snowpack across much of the West. 

Read More

Alaska Forest Service facility slated for closure amid federal restructuring

By Yereth Rosen
The Alaska Beacon
April 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Impacts to Alaska of the announced U.S. Forest Service “restructuring” that would close regional offices and most of the agency’s research facilities remain unclear. … Among the facilities on the closure list were two that are important to Alaska: the Anchorage Forestry Sciences Laboratory and the Oregon-based Pacific Northwest Research Station in Portland. But other impacts on the 17-million-acre Tongass National Forest and the 5.4-million-acre Chugach National Forest were not disclosed. …Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, and her staff are in a “fact-finding” mode and preparing to mount a “defense of the Forest Service in Alaska and make sure the employees are able to continue the good work that they’re currently doing,” said Murkowski spokesperson Joe Plesha. …The Anchorage lab that is scheduled for closure is located in downtown Anchorage. It supports research in the Tongass National Forest, which is the nation’s largest, and the Chugach National Forest, the second largest. 

In related news:

ABC 13 On Your Side, by Steven Bohner: USDA announces closure of all Forest Service research facilities in Michigan amidst restructuring

Read More

Flathead Forest Authorizes Logging Project West of Blacktail Mountain

By Tristan Scott
The Flathead Beacon
April 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Flathead National Forest officials have authorized an emergency logging and thinning project in the Salish Mountains near Lakeside, three miles west of Blacktail Mountain, with the aim of reducing wildland fire risk and improving forest health. The decision authorizes 2,823 acres of commercial vegetation treatment and construction of approximately 5.6 miles of temporary roads. Crews will use more than 67 miles of existing roads and haul routes. First proposed last October, the West Truman Project advanced quickly through the U.S. Forest Service’s environmental compliance process under a categorical exclusion, receiving final approval on April 14. Implementation of the project could begin “as early as fall 2027,” according to the decision and finding of applicability and no extraordinary circumstances (FANEC) signed by Swan Lake District Ranger Sarah Canepa. …The project would commercially thin 736 acres while using improvement cuts on 939 acres. It would treat 346 acres for shelterwood and 802 acres for seed tree.

Read More

Forest Service shake-up will boost states’ role, but even supporters have concerns

By Alex Brown
The Bellingham Herald
April 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A reorganization of the U.S. Forest Service signals that the agency is planning to lean heavily on states to help manage millions of acres of federal land. State officials and timber industry leaders say they’ve been given scant details about the plan to move the agency’s headquarters to Salt Lake City and close scores of research stations in dozens of states. While they wait for the dust to settle, they’re preparing for the Forest Service … to ask more of its partners under the new model. “The Forest Service itself is unable to uphold its mission and cannot alone manage the many challenges on these landscapes,” said Nick Smith, with the American Forest Resource Council. “The transition … is a recognition that partnerships are the future for the Forest Service.” But many forestry veterans fear the shake-up will cause more attrition… [Seeing the move to] Utah — a state whose leaders are often hostile to federal land ownership — as designed to undermine the Forest Service’s management of its lands.

Read More

Drought and low snowpack in Utah raise wildfire risk as federal budget creates a funding puzzle

By Annie Knox
Kiowa County Press
April 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

With extreme drought gripping most of Utah and spring heat melting reserves of mountain snow to an all-time low, the state is staring down a tinder dry wildfire season that could come with big changes to its federal funding. Maps of the national wildfire forecast show Utah covered in red by July — and with southern Utah getting there by June. “It has the potential to be a real season,” said State Forester Jamie Barnes, “but we’re going to make it through it, and we’re going to make sure that we do all we can to keep Utah safe.” The Division of Fire, Forestry and State Lands have more money for prevention efforts thanks to a state law passed last year. But they’re also keeping an eye on Washington, D.C. President Donald Trump is proposing budget cuts to forestry programs, along with research and development…

Read More

Reform the Forest Service, but don’t uproot the science

By Matt Behrens and Doug Tolman
The Deseret News
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USFS

When stewarding a forested landscape, there is no single tool for every acre. We do not log every mountainside, burn every valley bottom or treat every forest the same way. Good stewardship depends on matching the tool to the place, the time and the need. The same should be true of agency reform. If the U.S. Forest Service needs to change — and in many ways it does — it should be reformed with the same care good land managers bring to the ground. That is why the March 31 reorganization order announced by the Trump administration and USDA Secretary is more troubling than it first appears. Moving leadership closer to Western landscapes and communities is not a radical idea, and it is easy to see why Utahns — and many westerners — would welcome a Forest Service headquarters in Salt Lake City rather than Washington. But reform, too, must fit the landscape it is meant to improve.

Read More

Communities are waiting on billions in disaster funding from the Trump administration

By Lauren Sommer
National Public Radio
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Placerville, Calif., bears all the markers of a community at risk of a wildfire. The city’s rolling hillsides are dense with brush, which dries out during the hot summers. Older homes made of wood, which are more prone to igniting, are dotted throughout. …Local officials are trying to do something about it. The community is one of a handful piloting a program to help houses survive wildfires. Residents can get financial support to add fire-resistant building materials and to clear flammable brush around their homes. The program is largely funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). For three years, the county staff has been preparing to enroll more than 500 homes. But under the Trump administration, the project has been stalled for more than a year. The county needs FEMA to approve the project plan, but the agency hasn’t responded. Placerville is one of hundreds of communities around the country waiting on a growing backlog at FEMA. 

Read More

Conservation groups hold public meetings on Oregon forest protections after feds won’t

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Public Broadcasting
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Before issuing sweeping protections on more than 30% of U.S. Forest Service-managed lands in 2001, federal officials spent more than a year holding 600 meetings across Western states and received more than 1.6 million public comments. …But federal officials have not held a single public meeting since they announced in August an effort to terminate the 2001 Roadless Rule, which prohibits road construction, logging and mining on roughly 60 million acres of public land, including about 2 million acres of forests in Oregon. …Instead, U.S. Rep. Andrea Salinas — a Democrat representing Oregon’s Willamette Valley and ranking member of the House Agriculture Committee’s forestry subcommittee — and several conservation groups led by the Oregon chapter of the Sierra Club are taking up the mantle. …The U.S. Department of Agriculture has so far opened a single three-week comment period since its leader, Brooke Rollins, proposed terminating the rule in August.

Read More

Forest Service axes research stations as severe fire season threatens Pacific Northwest

By John Ryan
KUOW News
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The U.S. Forest Service is shutting down research stations around the country, including centers in Portland, Seattle, and Wenatchee, Washington. Though much of the stations’ research is long-term, some fire experts say the cuts could hamper firefighting efforts as soon as this summer. …The agency is shutting down 50 of its 70 research stations. More than 200 people work in the Northwest research stations that are closing. …“There is a position for every permanent employee willing to accept reassignment,” Forest Service Chief Thomas Schultz Jr. said in a memo to research branch staff. Schultz Jr., a Trump appointee, was previously a lobbyist for Idaho Forest Group, one of the nation’s largest lumber producers, based in Coeur d’Alene. …Nick Smith, a spokesperson for the American Forest Resource Council, a Western states timber industry group, said he welcomes the Forest Service restructuring.

Read More

Another year, another drought emergency declared in Washington state

By Dyer Oxley
Oregon Public Broadcasting
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

As Washington’s current snowpack conditions become worse than last year, a statewide drought emergency has been declared. It’s the fourth drought emergency for the state in as many years. According to Casey Sixkiller, director of the Washington State Department of Ecology, “widespread shortages and challenges across our state” are expected. “Going into April with half of our usual snowpack is alarming,” Sixkiller said. “… Issuing a drought emergency now helps water users prepare for what is likely to be a very difficult summer. This is becoming an all-too-common experience and is another example of how climate change is visibly reshaping our landscape.” The Department of Ecology declared the drought emergency on April 8.

Read More

New U.S. Forest Service unit aims to support timber economy

David Lepeska, Editor
Jefferson County Monitor
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MONTANA — The U.S. Forest Service plans to create a logging unit across regional national forests, seeking to boost economic stability by committing to process timber only via local businesses. The new Sustained Yield Unit – a concept created by 1944 federal law – would include 22 Montana counties and all of Helena-Lewis & Clark and Beaverhead-Deerlodge national forests, as well as most of Custer Gallatin. …Speaking for the Governor’s Office, Amanda Kaster, director of Montana’s Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, expressed the state’s strong support. …The draft plan estimates that the unit would directly support 192 jobs per year over the next decade, plus an additional 225 jobs via economic ripple effects. But the Marks saw the yield unit’s harvest plan as inadequately ambitious. …Barb Cestero, Montana director at the Wilderness Society, feared that given the Forest Service’s recent staff cuts, a potential over-emphasis on logging could be problematic.

Read More

Trump Administration Declares War on American Conservation

By Glynn Wilson
The New American Journal
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

COULTERVILLE, California – Teddy Roosevelt, John Muir and Gifford Pinchot are turning over in their graves as Donald Trump launches a devastating war against the conservation movement. “With the subtlety of a wrecking ball and the morality of a foreclosure notice the Trump administration announced the most devastating attack on the US Forest Service in the agency’s 121-year history. …The administration announced it would move the USFS headquarters out of Washington, D.C. to Salt Lake City, Utah. “They’re shuttering every single one of the 10 regional offices that have governed this agency and with them, the career professionals,” wrote Jim Pattiz. More than 50 research outlets across 31 states are set to close, labs that house decades of irreplaceable long-term science, “the kind you literally cannot restart once it’s gone,” Pattiz says. …Unfortunately, conservation groups like the Sierra Club built by John Muir have lost their focus and their power to bring change.

Read More

Supporting Roadless Rule is rational for economic, ecological reasons

By George Wuerthner
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

In 2001, the Forest Service signed the Roadless Rule. The Trump administration is seeking to rescind the rule. During a brief public comment period, 99% of the respondents opposed the idea. The Roadless Rule affected 58.5 million acres of Forest Service roadless lands and put them off-limits to new road construction, logging, and road reconstruction. As the Forest Service recognized in its original review, these roadless lands “have the greatest likelihood of altering and fragmenting landscapes, resulting in immediate, long-term loss of roadless area values and characteristics.” Abolishing protection from logging and roading provided by the Roadless Rule has major economic consequences, both in direct costs and in avoided costs. For instance, a practical rationale for the rule is the Forest Service’s acknowledgment that the roughly 370,000 miles of existing Forest Service road network could not be maintained. There is already an $11 billion backlog in road maintenance, and creating even more roads would exacerbate this situation.

Read More

How a dubious emergency timber directive is fast-tracking logging into 25 million acres of protected wilderness

By Dillon Osleger
High Country News
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

For the last 25 years, 58 million acres of American forest have had no new roads, no logging equipment, and no reason to appear on anyone’s industrial map. This year that is changing — and much faster than most people realize. The 2001 Roadless Rule has functioned as a safeguard for some of the most secluded and pristine lands in the Western US. …On June 23, 2025, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced the intent to rescind the rule entirely. As of 2026, the process has moved into its most critical phase; the USDA has announced an imminent release of the draft environmental impact statement and a formal proposed rule this spring. This release triggers a final public comment period. Compounding this shift, on March 31, the USDA issued a formal reorganization order for the Forest Service. This structural overhaul, including the moving or closure of regional offices and science centers, is anticipated to accelerate the implementation of extraction orders.

Read More

A warm winter in the West: Understanding the 2026 snow drought

By Brandon McWilliams
USDA Forest Service
April 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Mountains across the West have lost their usual wintry look this year. Snowpacks in the Cascade Range, the central and southern Rockies, and the Sierra Nevada are significantly below average. As of February 1, 2026, Oregon, Colorado, and Utah reported the lowest snowpack levels on record since continuous snow data collection began in the early 1980s. …This condition is a snow drought—a period when snowpack is abnormally low relative to the time of year and location. Many of the areas with low snow received ample precipitation early in the season. November and December snowfall was near normal in many parts of the West and looked to be setting the stage for a reasonable snow year. However, warm and dry January conditions and scattered rain-on-snow events in February caused much of the early accumulated snow to melt. This condition has put large parts of the West in a warm snow drought.

Read More

Opinion: Safeguarding the Roadless Rule saves the Tongass Forest

By Joel Jackson, president, Organized Village of Kake
The Anchorage Daily News
April 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

For generations, the Organized Village of Kake and other Southeast Alaska tribes have been stewards of the Tongass National Forest… This is not just land; the forest is our heritage and way of life. …The forest’s old growth trees store more carbon than they release, making the Tongass the nation’s greatest natural climate defense. …Yet this irreplaceable ecosystem faces a threat. The Trump administration is attempting to rescind the 2001 Roadless Area Conservation Rule, a policy that for more than 25 years has safeguarded nearly 58 million acres of national forests. The administration is proposing to strip protections from 44.7 million acres of ancestral homelands, including the Tongass National Forest. This is not just bad policy; it is a direct violation of tribal treaty rights, trust and federal law. The Roadless Rule is simple and effective. It prevents destructive road-building and industrial-scale logging in remote forest areas while preserving access for recreation, subsistence and cultural practices.

Read More

Rural Washington schools struggle with drop in logging dollars

By Aspen Ford
The Washington State Standard
April 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

In the North Cascades… the Mount Baker School District is facing a budget deficit exceeding $1 million, which local officials say is tied to declining timber sales on state lands. Three years ago, the rural district entered into what’s known as “binding conditions,” an arrangement where the state now oversees its day-to-day financial operations. Since then, it’s cut around 30 employees and increased class sizes. “Our main reason that we went in binding conditions was a precipitous drop in timber revenue,” said Russ Pfeiffer-Hoyt, school board president. The district’s timber revenue predicament is not unique among rural school districts. And it highlights rising tension around how the state is managing its public forests at a time when Lands Commissioner Dave Upthegrove has limited logging of some older tracts of trees. In the backdrop is a debate about whether Washington’s K-12 schools should depend heavily — or at all — on timber harvests.

Read More

Conservation group holds ‘public hearings’ on Tongass roadless rule as federal process moves ahead

By Jonson Kuhn
Alaska News Source
April 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – The federal government isn’t holding public meetings on a rule that could reshape logging across the nation’s largest national forest — so a conservation group is doing it instead. The Southeast Alaska Conservation Council is hosting a series of community “public hearings” this month on the Tongass National Forest’s roadless rule. …The group plans to collect public testimony and submit it directly into the federal record as the US Forest Service weighs potential changes to those protections. Nathan Newcomer, SEACC’s Tongass campaigner, said the group stepped in after learning the Forest Service had no plans to hold its own public meetings. …The Forest Service is expected to publish a draft environmental impact statement on the roadless rule — a step that would open a formal public comment period. Newcomer said that the window is expected to last 30 days and could begin as soon as late April.

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

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

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

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

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

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

Forest ‘fading’ in the face of withering drought

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

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

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Mast Reforestation Sells Out MT1 Biomass Burial Credits with Bain & Company and BMO Joining as Buyers

By Mast Reforestation
PR Newswire
April 15, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US West

SEATTLE — Mast Reforestation today announced that less than six weeks after issuance, it has sold 100% of the 4,277 biomass burial carbon removal credits from Mast Wood Preserve MT1, its pioneering post-wildfire restoration project in southern Montana. New buyers include Bain & Company, a global management consulting firm, and BMO, a North American financial institution, joining earlier participants including Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), CNaught, a major corporate buyer advised by SE Advisory Services, Muir AI, and others. The sell-out follows MT1’s January 2026 issuance under the Puro.earth registry, which represented the largest issuance to date under Puro.earth’s Terrestrial Storage of Biomass (TSB) methodology and one of the fastest project development timelines globally for a carbon removal project, at just nine months. “High-integrity carbon removal is an important part of Bain’s strategy to address residual emissions while helping scale the climate solutions the world needs,” said Sam Israelit, Partner and Chief Sustainability Officer, Bain & Company.

Read More