Region Archives: US West

Business & Politics

A mill town in mourning: Nippon Dynawave cleanup and questions continue

By Katie Pyzyk
Packaging Dive
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

LONGVIEW, WASHINGTON — Travelers near Nippon Dynawave Packaging Co.’s pulp and paper mill in Longview can smell freshly cut wood from the multiple nearby businesses that produce lumber, paper and packaging. Absent is the recognizable odor emitted during wood pulping, due to the mill’s nearly complete shutdown since a deadly white liquor tank implosion there. The May 26 implosion is being called one of the deadliest US workplace incidents in decades. …The Washington National Guard is among the local, state and federal crews assisting at the NDP facility, which has largely ceased operations. …The pain and sense of loss is palpable in this 38,000-person community in Southwest Washington, as well as in the surrounding areas of the state and neighboring Oregon. Gov. Bob Ferguson called for Washington state agency buildings’ flags to remain at half staff through sunset on June 7. Tears and stoic, strained faces were visible on those near the NDP site over the weekend.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Vancouver development team proposes city’s first-ever ‘pod hotel’ with 408 sleeping units

By Mike Howell
Business in Vancouver
May 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, US West

The City of Vancouver has received an application to rezone a downtown property to allow for the development of what would be a first in terms of a hotel design concept in the city—a 22-storey “pod hotel” containing 408 sleeping units. Unison Architecture and a developer want to build the hotel—out of a combination of concrete, steel and mass timber—on a narrow 25-foot-wide lot at 948 Howe St. “This project is targeted at budget-conscious urban travellers, especially 18- to 34-year-olds,” according to the development team’s application booklet. …Each nano pod would provide a private sleeping capsule of roughly 33 square feet. …Each nano room would be a fully enclosed space of roughly 105 square feet. The concept is not new, with Whistler and Richmond offering pod hotels. The form of accommodation is also popular in other countries, including parts of the US, Asia and Europe.

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Forestry

Governor Newsom announces expansion of the world’s largest civilian aerial firefighting fleet

Office of Governor Gavin Newsom
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SACRAMENTO – Marking a significant advancement in California’s wildfire preparedness, Governor Gavin Newsom today announced that the state’s fourth C-130 Hercules (C-130H) airtanker has entered active service. Alongside this deployment, the Governor celebrated the launch of California’s 11th Helitack base, which hosts the Sikorsky S70i Fire Hawk helicopter. Both resources will be stationed at the Ramona Airport in San Diego County, strategically integrating them into California’s world-leading aerial fleet. “The addition of this fourth C-130 Hercules airtanker to our world-class fleet, combined with the historic establishment of our 11th Helitack base, significantly enhances the rapid, aggressive response needed to save lives and protect our natural resources. California is making the investment into the key resources that help protect our communities from catastrophic wildfire.” In 2024, under Governor Newsom’s leadership, California made history as the first state in the nation to own, operate, and deploy its own fleet of C-130H Airtankers.

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From forest to front door: Understanding how wildfire spreads through communities

By Ty Burke
University of California, Berkeley
May 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

As California’s population boomed — from 10 million in 1950 to over 40 million today — the number of people living in fire-prone areas multiplied. …Despite the thousands of wildfires in California each year, we still don’t know that much about them — especially when it comes to how they spread in urban areas. The wildland-urban interface is the zone in which buildings and infrastructure border natural areas. Homes in this zone are at higher risk of burning, but quantifying that risk is challenging. Until recently, the mathematical models used to predict wildfire spread largely ignored these areas. Where a simulated wildfire reached a developed community, the models treated the land as unburnable. Which, of course, it’s not. …As wildfires push into urban areas, they behave in ways scientists are only beginning to understand. But Gollner is figuring out how to predict what urban wildfires will do next — by turning fire modeling into a complex, evolving problem.

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Improve County and Forest Service Wildfire Plans in Montana

By Mike Bader, natural resource consultant
The Missoula Current
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MONTANA — The US Forest Service and the timber industry have effectively lobbied Congress to enact laws based on fire paranoia that cut the public owners of these forests out of the process. They want the government to build roads at taxpayer expense to while compromising the best remaining fish and wildlife habitat and quiet spaces. Upon a molehill of truth they have constructed a mountain of disinformation. Claiming an emergency, the Forest Service is fast-tracking commercial timber sales in ways that severely limit and exempt them from environmental analysis. …They are removing the administrative review and public objection process. The bad stuff for wildlife, fish and people including ugly clearcuts, road construction and reduced water quality are being frontloaded. The good stuff including stream restoration and road reclamation are back ended. If past is prologue, the latter will not be funded or implemented as the Forest Service shifts its priority.

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Let’s Work Together For Oregon’s Forest

By Greg Ellison
NR Today
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — When I arrived in Roseburg, Oregon in 1975, Douglas County was Timber Capital of the world. Four out of ten employable adults were employed directly in the timber industry. …Fast forward fifty years. Four in one hundred people in Douglas County are directly employed by the timber industry. Fifty percent of the Umpqua National Forest has now burned. Sixty five percent loss of the spotted owl. The County literally did not have enough money to keep the Cartels from moving in and trashing our watersheds. Instead of ever coming close to any level of the mandated timber harvest allowed, all logging plans are automatically challenged legally. Since 1991 environmental groups have filed over 2,000 lawsuits. …There is good news! Eleven timber companies, thirteen conservation groups, and the State of Oregon Fish and Wildlife, have joined into an agreement known as the Private Forest Accord. Everybody is working together to improve watersheds.

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Logging Project Near Yellowstone Could Threaten Wildlife Habitat and Tourist-Dependent Businesses

By Mosabber Hossain
Inside Climate News
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©NationalParkService

A proposed federal logging project in the forests bordering Yellowstone National Park is drawing growing concern from local residents, business owners and conservation advocates who fear it could have lasting impacts on wildlife habitat, recreation and tourism in one of Montana’s most iconic landscapes. The U.S. Forest Service is using emergency authority to speed the approval of the project, for which public comment closed Monday. Opponents say the agency hasn’t explained what the emergency is. Yellowstone National Park is more than a world-famous tourist destination. Established in 1872 as the first national park in the United States, it serves as the core of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, one of the largest nearly intact temperate ecosystems on Earth. The park and the surrounding public lands provide critical habitat for grizzly bears, wolves, lynx, elk, bison and many other species, as well as reducing the impact of climate-damaging emissions by storing carbon. 

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New report shows pine beetle devastation surging in Colorado’s forests

By Lucas Boland
Rocky Mountain PBS
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

DENVER — A longstanding specter of the Colorado mountains is gaining ground in a new conquest of ponderosa pine forests. An outbreak of the mountain pine beetle is spreading quickly and expected to continue this summer under “prime conditions,” according to a 2025 forest health report and pine beetle article by the Colorado State Forest Service. Survey flights over parts of nine Colorado counties showed a 148% increase in beetle-impacted acreage from 2024 to 2025. Observers recorded 5,544 acres of dead or dying trees during flights last year, up from 2,236 acres the year prior. …Victimized trees were observed at nearly every Colorado latitude, from the northern border to Pueblo in the Front Range, and Grand Junction to the southern border on the Western Slope. …As of May 29, the state’s snowpack stood at 15% of median, depriving forests of moisture needed to prevent both wildfires and the spread of the pine beetle.

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The US Forest Service is too important to be a political pawn

By Dan Glickman and Ann Veneman
The Los Angeles Times
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

While most folks think that the US Department of Agriculture focuses on farm policy, the largest agency within USDA is the Forest Service. As secretaries of Agriculture during the Clinton and Bush administrations, we spent years getting to know what this agency does: not only timber management but also stewardship of the 193-million-acre National Forest System. But now, the Trump administration has taken significant steps to dramatically change the agency, to consolidate the firefighting work of USDA and Interior. …While some changes to the service appear warranted and well-intentioned, others have been criticized as seemingly intended to dismantle this storied institution. …During our tenures leading USDA, we both worked to streamline various programs and to right-size the workforce. …When leaders undertake significant changes, they need to be driven by data, based on compelling evidence and carefully reviewed facts — not based on ideology or simply meant to “shake things up.”

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The world’s largest fungus is hiding in Oregon’s Blue Mountains — and its really big

By Rebecca Shavit
The Brighter Side of News
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©NRCan

In Oregon’s Blue Mountains, patches of dying trees once looked like separate outbreaks, scattered across ridges and drainages as if disease had struck at random. Instead, scientists found something far stranger beneath the soil: many of those distant pockets belonged to the same fungus. That fungus, Armillaria ostoyae, covered about 9.65 square kilometers, making it the largest known individual fungus on Earth at the time of the study. It had likely been growing there for at least 1,900 years, and possibly as long as 8,650. For researchers, the discovery did more than set a record. It challenged a basic biological idea: what counts as an individual. “It’s one organism that began as a microscopic spore and then grew vegetatively, like a plant,” said Dr. Catherine Parks, a research plant pathologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service and coordinator of the team.

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Forest Service and state of South Dakota sign agreement to work together on forest management

By Joshua Haiar
South Dakota Searchlight
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USForestService

The U.S. Forest Service announced Friday that it has signed a five-year agreement to work with the state of South Dakota to carry out projects on national forest and adjacent land, possibly including timber harvesting, prescribed burning, forest thinning, grazing, and habitat and watershed restoration. …The shared stewardship agreement is between the state Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources and the Forest Service. It follows similar agreements in other states and comes after President Donald Trump’s executive order last year calling for an “immediate expansion” of American timber production. Following the initial five-year term, the agreement may be extended in increments of three years. …Specific projects involving money, services, property or other resources would require separate agreements and approvals. …“I’m suspicious that the primary reason for it is to help the Forest Service get more trees cut,” Dave Mertz, a retired Black Hills National Forest natural resource officer, said.

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University of Montana ecologist: Western forests need high-severity fire

By Laura Lundquist
Missoula Current
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Richard Hutto

UM ecologist Richard Hutto frowns every time he hears U.S. Forest Service managers and others make the black-and-white comparison of wildland fire as “good” if it’s low intensity and “bad” if it’s high intensity. The Trump administration is also using those reasons to justify the elimination of the 2001 Roadless Rule. …(They say) there’s ‘good’ fire and ‘bad’ fire,” Hutto told a crowd supporting the Roadless Rule a few weeks ago. “But I’m here to tell you, they’re wrong. The story is misleading. Most western conifer forests have always harbored mixed- to high-severity fire. And by most, I mean 85%, according to Land Fire database. Only 15% – mostly in Arizona and New Mexico – is low severity.” …The wide variety of species that can be found in forests prove that wildfires of all severities have burned across the landscape for centuries, creating the ecosystems that exist today.

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Conservation groups challenge Red Lodge area logging project again

By Mike Garrity
Billings Gazette
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Council on Wildlife and Fish, and Native Ecosystems Council filed a lawsuit in federal district court against the Custer Gallatin National Forest to stop them from sacrificing habitat for lynx, grizzly bear, elk and whitebark pine trees near the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and just north of Yellowstone National Park to subsidize the timber industry. …The groups first sued to stop the Greater Red Lodge logging project west of Red Lodge, Montana in July 2015 and again 2021. In both cases, the court ruled that the Forest Service violated the Endangered Species Act because the logging would have harmed lynx critical habitat. …They are effectively a single, landscape-scale logging project that the Forest Service illegally split into two. …To get around the requirements to protect lynx habitat and actually analyze the effects of logging on wildlife, the Forest Service authorized the logging projects under the Healthy Forest Restoration Act.

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Wyoming’s Hageman aims to block future ‘roadless areas,’ despite overwhelming support to keep public land pristine

By Mike Koshmrl
Oil City News
May 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Harriet Hageman

Rep. Harriet Hageman wants to stop future administrations from reinstating a 25-year-old policy that prevents roadbuilding on 59 million acres of the national forest, including 3.3 million acres of federal land in Wyoming. A rescission of the Clinton-era 2001 Roadless Rule is already underway. In June 2025, U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced her intention to repeal the “roadless” class of land that’s found on nine national forests in Wyoming. Subsequently, Rollins solicited public comment on that plan, which, based on the responses, is extraordinarily unpopular. More than 99% of the 200,000-plus people and groups who responded opposed the proposed rescission, according to a Center for Western Priorities analysis. A Hageman-led bill, House Resolution 7695, would codify the Trump administration’s undoing of the Roadless Rule in law and also prevent it from reappearing. The legislation states that any future secretary of agriculture “may not take any action to propose, finalize, implement, administer, or enforce any rule substantially similar to the rule.” 

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Could changes at the U.S. Forest Service impact wildfire response in Oregon?

By Vasili Varlamos
KATU 2 News
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

With Oregon facing what state leaders say could be another difficult wildfire season, questions are emerging about whether major changes inside the U.S. Forest Service could eventually impact how quickly fires are detected and attacked across the West. “All indications suggest a more challenging fire season ahead of all of us,” said Oregon Governor Tina Kotek… The warning comes after a historically warm winter, low snowpack levels, and worsening drought conditions across parts of Oregon. At the same time, the Forest Service is undergoing major national restructuring efforts, including consolidating research facilities and closing its nine regional offices nationwide. …Still, federal firefighters and local fire leaders say they do not expect major disruptions to wildfire response this season. “I think there’s just a growing amount of apprehension about what it’s gonna look like on the ground level in a couple of years’ time,” said Kieran Evans, a squad leader with the Forest Service.

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Changes could be coming to Alaska’s Tongass forest. Some are putting the forest service on blast

By Julien Greene
CBC News
May 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Tlingit and Haida recently harvested totem trees in the Tongass National Forest in Southeast Alaska whose rings suggest they are 500 years old. Members of those nations don’t often take saws to those giants — if they do, it’s done with the utmost care and gratitude. …The president of the Craig Tribal Association, which represents Tlingit and Haida, is unequivocal. “We are the people of the Tongass,” he said. …It’s been a decade since the federal government last updated the management plan for the region, which covers roughly 80 per cent of the Alaska panhandle. …The Forest Service states that with younger trees approaching harvestable age, it proposes increasing the sale of timber to 72 million board feet every year during the next decade. That’s an increase of roughly 56 per cent. …While the tribes are concerned about the impact of logging on their lands and practices, some conservation and fisheries advocates say they’re concerned about its impact on fish and their habitats.

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AccuWeather releases 2026 Oregon fire forecast and it’s … not great

By Ginnie Sandoval
The Statesman Journal
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

AccuWeather has released its latest outlook on what Oregon could expect for the 2026 fire season, forecasting another active year for wildfires for much of the western half of America. Experts said that 2026 may see fewer fires overall, however, drought conditions, dry vegetation and extreme heat are likely to cause fires to spread more quickly and grow larger before crews are able to contain them, resulting in more land burned. According to the company’s newly released wildfire forecast, between 65,000 and 80,000 wildfires are expected nationwide this year, burning an estimated 5.5 million to 8 million acres. That compares to 77,850 fires that burned 5.1 million acres in 2025. …Forecasters said the highest wildfire risk this year is expected across the Southwest, Rockies, Great Basin and Interior Northwest, including parts of Oregon and Washington. AccuWeather meteorologists said drought and prolonged heat are continuing to intensify wildfire conditions across much of the west.

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Lake Tahoe Community College breaks ground on 100,000-square-foot public safety training complex

By Brenna O’Boyle
KOLO 8 NewsNow
May 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif.  – On Wednesday, May 20, Lake Tahoe Community College broke ground on a nearly 100,000-square-foot Tahoe Basin Public Safety Training Complex, the first facility of its kind in the Tahoe Basin dedicated to training firefighters, forestry professionals, emergency medical technicians, and other first responders. …The facility is scheduled to open in fall 2027. The complex will include a multi-story training tower with live-fire capability, more than two acres of training tarmac, a 7,000-square-foot equipment storage facility, and multiple training hydrants with a water reclamation system. It will support the college’s Fire Academy, Fire Science, Forestry Education, Emergency Medical Services, and Search and Rescue programs. The project is funded through $17 million in state, federal, and local support, including California Community Colleges’ Fire and Forestry Pathways funding, its voter-approved Measure F bond, and federal appropriations.

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Bark beetle outbreaks expand during another warm, dry year

Colorado State University
May 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Colorado’s top forest health concern is a mountain pine beetle outbreak on the Front Range that has expanded by nearly 150% from 2024 to 2025, according to a Colorado State Forest Service report. The report shows the continued spread of mountain pine beetles and other forest insects during the second consecutive year of above-average temperatures and below-average precipitation. Trees in forests across Colorado are stressed following a record warm winter and low snowpack, and infestations of bark beetles and western spruce budworm are expected to intensify and expand. “Heat and drought are stressing our forests, turning many areas into tinderboxes and making it harder for trees to fight off bark beetles and other insects,” said Matt McCombs, state forester and director of the CSFS. …Trees killed by drought, insects or disease can potentially alter wildfire behavior should there be ignition from lightning or other sources. 

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Merkley, Wyden Announce Over $9.3 Million to Support Working Forestlands in Oregon

Ron Wyden Senator for Oregon
May 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Washington, D.C. – Oregon’s U.S. Senators Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden announced today the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) is awarding $3.75 million to Lostine Forest in Wallowa County and $5.56 million to Madrone Ridge Forest in Jackson County. The Senators secured this federal funding in the Fiscal Year 2026 Interior-Environment Appropriations Act through the Land and Water Conservation Fund for the Forest Legacy Program. These Oregon projects will help conserve nearly 12,000 acres of working forestland, improve wildfire resilience, protect fish and wildlife habitat, and expand public recreation opportunities. …Through its Forest Legacy Program, the USFS partners with states, Tribes, and local organizations to conserve privately owned working forestlands through conservation easements and land acquisitions. These two awards in Oregon are part of a larger $80 million investment provided by Congress in the Fiscal Year 2026 Interior-Environment Appropriations Act to support 15 projects conserving more than 34,000 acres of working forests in 11 states.

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Ruling halts logging project in Southern Oregon

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
May 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Environmental groups have successfully stopped a series of logging projects in coastal Southern Oregon after scoring a win in federal court. On Thursday, a U.S. District Court judge ruled the U.S. Bureau of Land Management broke environmental laws when it approved a plan to log about 2,400 acres of forests near Yoncalla in Douglas County. …The court ordered BLM to throw out the entirety of the logging plan it called the Blue and Gold project. If the bureau wants to log this area in the future, it will need to come up with a new plan — and it will have to study these forests more closely to assure the public that it won’t kill large, ancient trees. …Timber industry representatives and local county politicians have long argued that federal law requires extensive logging in this region — namely in forests once owned by the Oregon and California Railroad company.

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Conservationists claim old-growth Oregon forest was logged

By Alan Torres
The Register-Guard
May 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A group of Oregon conservation organizations allege old-growth trees are illegally being logged near Yoncalla in Douglas County, about 50 miles south of Eugene. …The organizations previously sued to try to block the sale, alleging it violated federal environmental laws. That lawsuit is in process and the sale has gone forward for now, but the conservationists now believe they’ve found evidence the sale included federally protected trees. According to the plaintiffs, volunteers documented trees over 40 inches in diameter and older than 170 years being logged in the area. …The BLM’s analysis concluded the oldest trees were only 140 years old, but conservationists say that analysis is wrong. The plan calls for logging 2,400 acres over eight years, with sales beginning in 2024. …Cascadia Wildlands claims some of the trees set for logging are 600 years old, according to reporting by Oregon Public Broadcasting.

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Hundreds of Northwest communities at higher wildfire risk than previously thought, research finds

By Shaanth Nanguneri
Jefferson Public Radio
May 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

More than 400 mostly small communities throughout the Northwest, including Cave Junction, Glendale and La Pine in southern and central Oregon, are at greater risk of suffering from wildfires and their impacts than previously thought when socioeconomic conditions are factored into risk assessments, new research finds. Researchers from Oregon State University and The Nature Conservancy, with funding from the U.S. Forest Service, conducted a review of wildfire risks in more than 1,000 communities in the region, and applied a social vulnerability index to also account for factors such as household demographics, neighborhood structural density, housing types and local transportation. Nearly half the communities, 459, were shown to be at greater wildfire risk than previously thought. For 541 communities, risk levels declined when socioeconomic factors were considered, indicating public dollars might be better served assisting low-income communities with wildfire prevention than more affluent ones, the researchers suggested.

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Oregon’s warm winter, spring have invasive tree-killing bugs hatching early, state says

By Mary Mooney
The Oregonian
May 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

…The mild temperatures through the winter and now into spring have resulted in the invasive emerald ash borer maturing faster and emerging weeks earlier than usual, the Oregon Department of Forestry says. Wyatt Williams, an invasive species specialist with the department, confirmed he found one in early May in King City in southeast Washington County, a news release states. …So far there’s no cure for a tree infested with the bugs – they’re a death sentence, the Extension Service says. It can take up to six years for an infested tree to die. …Ash borers normally start emerging from inside tree trunks in early June and into July, Oregon forestry officials say. But that’s changing along with the climate. This past winter was tied with 1934 as the warmest on record in western Oregon, followed by record-breaking or near record-breaking high temperatures this spring, the state said in a statement.

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Annual Aerial Detection Maps 391,000 Acres in Washington with Dead or Damaged Trees

Washington State Department of Natural Resources
May 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The Washington State Department of Natural Resources released its annual Forest Health Highlights report on Monday following a 2025 survey season defined by a period of unprecedented structural and administrative challenges. The joint aerial detection survey (ADS) flown by DNR and USDA Forest Service (USFS) staff covered 16.5 million acres of forested land across Washington, accounting for roughly 75% of the 22 million forested acres in the state and the first time since 2021 that a full survey was not completed. …The 2025 ADS recorded some level of tree mortality, defoliation, crown damage, or foliar disease on approximately 391,000 acres – a decrease of more than 150,000 acres from 2024, but certain to be an undercount given limitations of the 2025 survey.

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Southeast Alaskans largely critical of new direction on Tongass management plan, process

By Jasz Garrett
Yakima Herald-Republic
May 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A new direction in the Tongass management plan gathered more than 300 comments from Southeast Alaskans, who asked the U.S. Forest Service to manage timber and mining, along with recreation, in the forest they call home. The Coeur Alaska Kensington Mine said the revised plan should recognize the Tongass National Forest as a mining district, not solely as a timber or conservation reserve. “The revised Forest Plan should affirm that responsible mineral exploration and development are fully compatible with ecological stewardship, subsistence values, and multiple use when properly planned and regulated,” wrote Steve Ball, general manager of the mine. He also wrote Forest Service’s Roadless Area Conservation Rule prohibitions should not be applied to mining operations. Others criticized the Trump administration and made a plea to protect old-growth forests and the wildlife that live there. Some criticized the Forest Service itself for a rushed process.

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Adults in custody train on front lines of Oregon wildfire response at 75-year-old forest prison camp

By Devon Haskins
KGW8 News
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

TILLAMOOK, Ore. — More than 100 adults in custody are undergoing hands-on wildland firefighting training this week at the South Fork Forest Camp near Tillamook as part of a long-standing partnership between the Oregon Department of Forestry and the Oregon Department of Corrections. The training prepares participants to deploy to active fires as soon as they complete certification, bolstering the state’s wildfire response capacity ahead of fire season. The training combines classroom instruction with physically demanding field exercises designed to simulate real wildfire conditions. Derek Gasperini, a public affairs officer with the Oregon Department of Forestry, said the crews play a critical role once fires are contained. …The South Fork Forest Camp is the oldest and largest work camp of its kind in the Pacific Northwest. Since 1951, it has trained adults in custody to assist with fire suppression and forest management while preparing them for reintegration into society.

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Oregon State University Extension helps woodland owners consider big trees

By Chris Branam
Oregon State University
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

CORVALLIS, Ore. — Coast redwoods and giant sequoias can inspire awe long before landowners consider soil, rainfall, wildlife damage, markets or Oregon forest practice laws. For some Oregonians, the appeal is personal. The trees are iconic, long-lived and striking. They can be planted for beauty, experimentation, conservation, timber, biodiversity or interest in how forests may adapt to a changing climate. But planting them in Oregon also raises practical questions: Will they grow well on a given site? Are they appropriate after timber harvest? Can they meet tax-deferral or cost-share requirements? What happens if a coast redwood, known for vigorous resprouting, becomes part of a forest for the long term? To help small woodland owners and others think through those decisions, Oregon State University Extension Service foresters developed Growing redwood and giant sequoia in Oregon: A resource guide for small woodland owners, published in October 2025.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

California makes controversial change to cap-and-invest program

By Jeff St. John
Canary Media
June 1, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

The California Air Resources Board on Friday approved major changes to the state’s cap-and-invest program, including a controversial plan to allow polluting industries to earn free emissions allowances if they invest in decarbonizing their facilities — a move critics say could undermine California’s decarbonization goals. Friday’s vote capped months of fighting between environmental groups and polluting industries over the future of the state’s two-decade-old carbon-trading regime, which lawmakers reauthorized last year. Companies covered by the program must either reduce their carbon emissions below a certain state-mandated limit or buy allowances from the market to offset emissions in excess of that limit. …CARB Chair Lauren Sanchez agreed at Friday’s hearing to insert several last-minute amendments, to forestall the risk of MDI undermining state carbon-reduction targets or throttling carbon market revenues. …Ultimately, the board voted 10 to 3 to adopt the plan. The MDI program will open in mid-2027.

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Carbon Markets Underestimate Risks U.S. Forests Face From Climate Change

By University of Utah
NewsWise
May 20, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US West

William Anderegg

…Many corporate, national and state climate policies rely on forests’ ability to store carbon—often tracked and funded through a system of “carbon credits” issued to polluting industries in exchange for protecting and restoring forests. But when trees die suddenly—from wildfire, drought or insect infestation—vast amounts of greenhouse gases are released, exacerbating ongoing climate change. And the warming climate is accelerating this problem by making such disturbances more frequent and severe. New research led by University of Utah scientists in collaboration with international experts sought to determine the likelihood that forests will release their stored carbon over the next 100 years. Along the way, they documented how current carbon-credit systems fail to accurately account for that risk in U.S. forests, particularly the parched U.S. West. But the research points out ways this problem can be corrected, according to William Anderegg, senior author on the study published in Nature.

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Wood pellet industry isn’t clean or green, and doesn’t belong in Washington

By Peter Riggs, director, Pivot Point
The Seattle Times
May 13, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US West

Three years ago, two big new wood-pellet manufacturing plants were proposed along the Washington coast — the first of their kind in the Pacific Northwest. The British utility Drax planned a facility in Longview next to the Columbia River. Another company, Pacific Northwest Renewable Energy Project (PNWRE), proposed a similar plant in Hoquiam, Grays Harbor County. These plans are now unraveling. Last year, Drax suspended work on its Longview plant, citing weak demand for wood pellets it planned to export to overseas power plants. The year before, Enviva, Drax’s biggest competitor declared bankruptcy… What we’re learning is the wood pellet industry can’t compete without extensive subsidies. …These adverse economic headwinds should serve as a warning sign… Most likely, the project will fail economically, saddling Grays Harbor with a costly cleanup project instead of providing the promise of new  jobs or local revenue. It would be better to cut our losses now — before this doomed project is built. [A Seattle Times subscription is required for full access]

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Health & Safety

Why is dilution a cleanup strategy for the Longview mill disaster?

By Greg Kim
The Seattle Times
June 4, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

LONGVIEW, Washington — After a tank containing about 600,000 gallons of “white liquor” imploded in Longview on May 26, killing 11 people, cleanup efforts have largely consisted of diluting affected waterways. You might be wondering, is dilution enough to clean up a chemical spill? The Washington State Department of Ecology says it is, and that it comes down to the composition of white liquor. White liquor mostly consists of two chemical compounds — sodium hydroxide (commonly called lye) and sodium sulfide. What makes it dangerous to humans and the environment is primarily the high concentration of hydroxide, which results in high pH levels. That helps break down wood chips into pulp in paper mills but can burn tissue and corrode materials like concrete, plastics and rubber. Diluting with water reduces the concentration of hydroxide, which neutralizes the pH. …The components that remain after diluting white liquor with water, such as sodium, oxygen, and hydrogen, are naturally occurring elements that don’t pose an environmental risk, Tang said. [to access the full story a Seattle Times is required]

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Officials monitor Longview water supply, wildlife after industrial disaster that killed 11

KOMO News
May 31, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

LONGVIEW, Washington — Recovery crews on Friday located the ninth and final person missing at the site of the Nippon Dynawave industrial incident, bringing the death toll from the tragedy to 11. …The ruptured tank spilled up to 570,000 gallons of white liquor, a strong alkaline liquid made mostly of sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfide used in the papermaking process to dissolve wood chips. Officials said the liquid made it into the nearby Columbia River and several nearby ditches, sloughs, and dikes. …Longview city officials reassured residents on Thursday that the city’s water was safe, and the Washington State Department of Ecology stated that the water treatment plant would shut down automatically before contaminated water could enter the public water system. …Response crews have documented some impacts to fish and wildlife in drainage systems adjacent to the incident area. Officials said approximately 200 dead fish have been collected.

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Longview mill tragedy highlights dangerous nature of wood product manufacturing

By Kyra Buckley
Oregon Public
May 29, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

This week’s chemical blast that killed at least eight workers at Longview’s Nippon Dynawave Packaging highlights the potential dangers in the timber and paper manufacturing industries. …“We work in a highly hazardous atmosphere, in a highly hazardous industry,” Brian Wood, director of support services for Nippon Dynawave, said. …The industries involved in the range of economic activities from cutting timber to manufacturing paper have shed jobs in recent decades, yet this sector continues to have some of the deadliest occupations. The disaster in Longview highlights the dangerous chemicals used in paper making. In 2024, 13 people were killed while working at their paper manufacturing job, according to the US Bureau of Labor and Statistics. Across the country jobs in the sector have plummeted. In the last quarter century, BLS figures show paper manufacturing employment fell by 230,000 jobs to sit around 355,000 across the country. Industry researchers estimate as many as 45 mills closed last year.

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Confirmed death toll climbs to 8 in Longview paper mill disaster

By Courtenay Sherwood
Oregon Public Broadcasting
May 28, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

Recovery efforts are continuing at the Nippon Dynawave Packaging, where a tank holding hundreds of thousands of gallons of a caustic chemical ruptured. Crews recovered six bodies from a Longview paper mill Thursday as they continued the response to a massive chemical tank rupture earlier this week. That brings the confirmed death toll from the Tuesday disaster to eight. Three more people remain unaccounted, and are presumed dead. The fatal release of a highly caustic liquid is Washington state’s deadliest workplace tragedy in 96 years. Here’s some of what we know about the disaster and ongoing recovery efforts. The death toll is likely to climb. …Recovery crews are navigating a challenging scene. …The danger appears contained — mostly, but tens of thousands of gallons of the caustic chemical known as white liquor escaped. Some reached a storm drain system that flows to the Columbia River. …The paper mill is shut down for now.

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How a tank rupture disrupted life in a tight-knit Washington town that has lived with pulp mills for generations

By Ray Sanchez
CNN
May 28, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

©Wiki

It was not the typical morning banter at the bustling Pancake House in the mill town of Longview, Washington. “We’ve actually just been sick to our stomach,” said Julie Oliver, 60, taking a moment from serving breakfast to speak on the phone. “We realize how many of the ones that are still missing are our customers, and very close family, and people that we’ve known for many years.” The talk in Longview – an industrial and shipping hub along the Columbia River in southwestern Washington, roughly 50 miles north of Portland, Oregon – on Wednesday centered on the search for those missing and presumed dead a day after a chemical tank rupture at a popular paper plant. Eleven people are believed to have died in the tragedy. …The rupture took place during a shift change, and the bodies of the workers were found in an area where they would gather in the morning before getting their assignments for the day, officials said.

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Presumed death toll rises to 11 after Washington state paper mill tank rupture

By Claire Rush
Associated Press in WBAL TV
May 27, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: US West

LONGVIEW, Wash. —Crews resumed the grim search Wednesday for nine people presumed killed at a Washington state paper mill where a chemical tank ruptured a day earlier in one of the deadliest U.S. workplace accidents in years. The likely death toll rose to 11, including the missing, after another person who was injured died, authorities said Wednesday. Authorities said there was no hope of finding more survivors following Tuesday’s tank failure at the Nippon Dynawave Packaging Co. in Longview, which also injured another eight people, including a firefighter who was treated and released by a hospital. If the 11 deaths are confirmed, it would be one of the deadliest industrial accidents in the U.S. in recent decades — alongside a series of blasts that killed 16 people at an explosives plant in Tennessee last fall… Officials said Wednesday that the paper mill tank spilled more than 500,000 gallons of “white liquor,” a highly destructive chemical mixture used in paper manufacturing.

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Chemicals from Longview mill blast reached Columbia River, officials say

By Kristine de Leon
The Oregonian
May 28, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: US West

©Wiki

Contamination from the catastrophic chemical tank failure at a southwest Washington pulp and paper mill has flowed into the Columbia River, officials confirmed Wednesday, opening a troubling new chapter in what could become the region’s deadliest industrial accident in modern history. …The spill happened after a massive storage tank failed during a morning shift change, sending an estimated 550,000 to 570,000 gallons of chemical slurry pouring through the mill complex and into nearby drainage systems, said Scott Goldstein, chief of the Cowlitz 2 Fire & Rescue district. “Testing of water samples has confirmed contamination entered the Columbia River during the day yesterday,” Goldstein said. He added that environmental crews are now “working to classify or quantify that” and determine the extent of the damage. The confirmation marks a significant development in the investigation and raises questions about the spill’s impact on fish, wetlands and the Northwest’s largest river system.

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Chemical tank implosion in Washington state kills 1 and leaves 9 missing

By Claire Rush and Rebecca Boone
Associated Press in KCRA
May 27, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: US West

LONGVIEW, Wash. — A massive chemical tank holding nearly a million gallons of a highly corrosive liquid imploded and collapsed Tuesday at a Washington paper mill, killing at least one worker and leaving nine others unaccounted for with no hope for rescue, authorities said. Another nine people were injured, some severely, in the spill at Nippon Dynawave Packaging Co. in Longview. The cause remained unclear. “At the moment we are not aware of any rescues that are yet to be made,” Cowlitz Fire and Rescue Chief Scott Goldstein said during a Tuesday evening news conference in which officials repeatedly referred to the situation as a recovery effort. That effort would not resume until Wednesday morning, when emergency responders planned to work on stabilizing the collapsed tank, which still had about 90,000 gallons (more than 340,000 liters) of a chemical brew known as “white liquor” inside, and then search for the missing, Goldstein said.

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Forest Fires

New Mexico wildfire sparked by fatal medical plane crash spreads quickly in rural area

By Savannah Peters
Associated Press in WBOC
May 18, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A fast-growing wildfire sparked by the fatal crash of a small medical plane outside Ruidoso, New Mexico, has triggered evacuations for a rural area north of the Capitan Mountains and closures in the Lincoln National Forest, officials said Monday. The plane was en route from Roswell Air Center to Sierra Blanca Regional Airport when it crashed before dawn Thursday, killing the four people aboard. They were identified as pilots Keelan Clark and Ali Kawsara with the company Generation Jets and flight nurses Jamie Novick and Sarah Clark with Trans Aero MedEvac. …The wildfire grew rapidly over the weekend amid dry and windy conditions, nearly doubling in size between Sunday and Monday morning to more than 19 square miles (50 square kilometers). It was burning out of control in a sparsely populated area despite the efforts of more than 600 firefighters from the U.S. Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management and several interagency Hotshot crews.

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