Daily News for June 26, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

US Supreme Court blocks Roundup lawsuits against Bayer

The Tree Frog Forestry News
June 26, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

The US Supreme Court backed Bayer in glyphosate-based Roundup ruling with implications for forestry and pesticide regulation. In other Forestry news: South Carolina has a new state forest; the US Forest Service eyes emergency salvage logging; Roger Sabbadini says the US Fix Our Forest Act is no fix; Laurisa Dohm says BC policy fuels forest dysfunction;  Woodlots BC collaborates on tenure pricing; the Forest Enhancement Society of BC highlights new projects; and the Osoyoos Indian Band advances post-wildfire forest restoration.

In Business news: Prime Minister Carney says Canada will only accept a ‘real‘ trade deal; US paper workers press Congress to renew USMCA; Domtar releases its 2025 sustainability report; Califoria’s Mad River Mass Timber brings new jobs to Humboldt; and US GDP rose 2.1%, while inflation hit 3-year high. Meanwhile: the Softwood Lumber Board highlights code wins; England’s fire-safety proposal could restrict timber structures; and Canada’s transition to net zero is called an opening for mass timber.

Finally, a Swedish University and IKEA launch a research lab on rainforest restoration.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

‘It has to be a real deal’: PM Carney says ahead of trade talks with Trump

By Rachel Aiello
CTV News
June 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Mark Carney

Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will work with the United States and Mexico to “modernize” the trilateral trade deal known as CUSMA, but won’t accept a bad deal from U.S. President Donald Trump. “We could sign a bad deal this afternoon. We could have signed a bad deal a year ago. We’re not going to sign a bad deal, so it has to be a real deal,” he said Thursday. He was asked about U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra’s comment that officials are “not anywhere close” to a deal. “What I have seen with the president is that you’re not close to making a deal, and then you make a deal,” the prime minster said. “It doesn’t mean the deals are good deals, but it means being prepared, having done the work, knowing what you want,” he added.

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Pulp And Paperworkers’ Resource Council Visits Capitol Hill

PaperAge
June 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Approximately 85 American workers employed in the US forest products industry descended on Washington, D.C. and made more than 539 visits with members of Congress and administration officials. Their goal was to educate elected officials on the impacts of legislative and regulatory decisions on the environment and on the families and communities that depend on forest products manufacturing for their livelihood. …The Pulp and Paperworkers’ Resource Council (PPRC) discussed several issues with members of Congress, including::

  • International Trade: The PPRC supports renewing the USMCA
  • Forest Management: The PPRC supports the Fix Our Forest Act
  • Paper Options: The public should have options 
  • Recycling: The PPRC opposes the Recycled Materials Attribution Act
  • Endangered Species Act: The PPRC supports Endangered Species Act reform
  • Renewable Biomass: The PPRC calls calls for regulatory certainty for the carbon neutrality of bioenergy

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Domtar Publishes 2025 Sustainability Report: Advancing Our Sustainability Journey

Domtar Corporation
June 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

FORT MILL, SC—Domtar, a leading North American manufacturer of diversified forest products, today released its 2025 sustainability report entitled Advancing Our Sustainability Journey. The report reflects Domtar’s second year of disclosure as a unified company and demonstrates the progress the company has made in advancing its sustainability journey. “This report shows how much we’ve achieved since we launched our 2030 Sustainability Strategy in May 2025,” said Sabrina de Branco, Global Chief Sustainability Officer. “In a relatively short period of time, we have made meaningful progress in strengthening governance, aligning key policies and processes, clarifying responsibilities and advancing initiatives that are now taking shape across the organization.

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Supreme Court ruling blocks thousands of lawsuits against the maker of Roundup weedkiller

By Lindsay Whitehurst and David Lieb
The Associated Press
June 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The Supreme Court sided with the maker of Roundup weedkiller Thursday in a ruling expected to block thousands of lawsuits alleging it failed to warn people the product could cause cancer. The case came after a tidal wave of litigation that included some multibillion-dollar verdicts against Bayer, a German manufacturer that acquired Roundup from Monsanto, in 2018. The decision is a victory for the US administration but provoked outrage from the “ Make America Healthy Again” movement. The high court, in a 7-2 ruling, held that Roundup cannot be sued in state courts for failure to warn because federal regulators have found a cancer link unlikely and do not require a warning label. Federal law also bars states from imposing additional or different labeling requirements. …The ruling could affect similar health claims against other pesticide products. …The ruling was denounced by environmental groups and lawyers representing people who believe they were harmed by Roundup.

Related coverage by:

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Mad River Mass Timber Brings New Jobs to Humboldt’s Beleaguered Timber Industry

By Liam Gwynn
Redwood News
June 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

©MadRiverMassTimber

In Korbel, the first mass timber facility in California is offering new opportunities for Humboldt County’s struggling timber industry. Mad River Mass Timber creates dowel-laminated timber that offers a climate-friendly alternative to steel and concrete. … Recent code changes in California have allowed for the creation of buildings up to 18 stories tall using only mass timber. This combined with a new California law that will require embodied carbon in new construction has opened up new opportunities for the mass timber industry. …Mad River Mass Timber recently moved out of their concept phase and are looking to expand operations in phase two later this year. “We’ll be expanding to our phase two facility, which will be a much higher capacity, more of like the large-scale mass timber,” said Mad River Mass Timber founder George Schmidbauer. “For that, we’ll be hiring up to 30 employees of various different skill sets.”

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Finance & Economics

US GDP increased 2.1% in the first quarter of 2026

US Bureau of Economic Analysis
June 25, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the first quarter of 2026 (January, February, and March), according to the third estimate released today by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the fourth quarter of 2025, real GDP increased 0.5 percent. The increase in Q1 GDP primarily reflected increases in investment, exports, government spending, and consumer spending. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, increased. Real GDP was revised up 0.5 percentage point from the second estimate, primarily reflecting a downward revision to imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, that was partly offset by a downward revision to consumer spending.

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US Inflation Hits 3-Years High in May

By Fan-Yu Kuo
NAHB Eye on Housing
June 25, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

As the Iran conflict pushed up energy prices, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index—the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge—accelerated to a three-year high in May. While oil and gasoline prices have declined in recent weeks as planned Strait of Hormuz reopening reduced the risk of further energy price spikes, inflation may stay elevated in the coming months due to underlying price pressures. This could challenge the Fed’s recommitment to its price stability mandate. The headline PCE price index increased 4.1% in May from a year ago, following a 3.8% increase in April, according to the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis. That was the highest level since April 2023. The “core” PCE price index, which excludes food and energy, rose 3.4% over the past twelve months, the highest since May 2023.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The economic case for developing green buildings

By Danny Kurcharsky
Real Estate News Exchange
June 25, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Peter Howard

MONTREAL — The global transition to a net zero economy is inevitable but how Canada will take advantage of the opportunity to drive the development of green buildings remains a question mark. So says Peter Howard, founder of Zfolio. …He was the keynote speaker at the Building Lasting Change conference, hosted in Montreal by the Canada Green Building Council (CaGBC). Howard said the transition to low carbon technology is inevitable because it is being driven by economics and irreversible trends in technology. …Howard said mass retrofits would put Canadian tradespeople to work electrifying heating and hot water and creating buildings that generate and store their own electricity. …In addition, mass timber buildings can be built, drawing on Canadian forestry products, he said. Resilient buildings and neighbourhoods can be created that resist flooding, storms and blackouts and that generate and store some of their own electricity and water supply.

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Advancing Wood Projects Through Codes, Support, and Education

The Softwood Lumber Board
June 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

In this Monthly Update, you find these stories and more:

  • Across SLB-supported programs, the operating environment is becoming more data-driven, faster-moving, and more contested. Artificial intelligence allows the SLB and its programs to turn technical expertise and institutional knowledge into market influence more efficiently. …SLB and its programs have moved from AI awareness into active implementation. 
  • At the International Code Council’s final Public Comment Hearings in April, the AWC secured wins that directly protect and expand wood product markets. 
  • 30 architecture educators from 24 schools across 17 states came together in Auburn, Alabama, for the largest faculty development workshop the SLB has supported to date. …When faculty return to campus better prepared to teach wood, the impact reaches future professionals…
  • General contractors unfamiliar with mass timber often inflate bids to account for perceived risk… To help address this issue, the WoodWorks Construction Management team is reaching out proactively to mass timber projects at the “Waiting for Construction” stage. 

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England fire-safety proposal could restrict timber structures above 11m

Fordaq.com
June 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

A proposed change to England’s fire-safety guidance could make it much harder to use timber in load-bearing structures above 11 metres. The consultation on changes to Approved Document B, the fire-safety guidance used under the Building Regulations in England, closes on 1 July 2026. Under the draft text, load-bearing elements of structure in buildings with a storey more than 11 metres above ground level should be made from materials or products achieving at least class A2-s3,d2. Most structural timber and mass timber products do not normally meet this reaction-to-fire classification. The proposal would move the debate beyond external walls and cladding. It could affect the structural frame itself in a much wider group of mid-rise residential, commercial and mixed-use buildings. This matters because mass timber and CLT are increasingly used in projects where developers want faster construction and lower embodied carbon compared with concrete or steel.

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Forestry

Kamloops Fire Centre warns Sicamous council of underlying dry conditions in local forests

By Luc Rempel
Castanet
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A Kamloops Fire Centre spokesperson told Sicamous council that local forests are still quite dry despite a burst of fresh green growth brought on by recent wet weather. At the June 24 District of Sicamous committee of the whole meeting, Kamloops Fire Centre manager Jeff Dunne gave council an overview of BC Wildfire Service’s regional operations and a look at what to expect in the coming months. Dunne said a dry start to the spring compounded on drought conditions experienced over the winter. “As everyone is aware, our spring this year looked a little bit challenging,” Dunne said. “Over-winter snows in some parts of the region were way below average.” …Dunne said typically, the Kamloops Fire Centre will be the busiest in the middle of July, but this year BCWS has already seen significant fire behaviour and growth across the region. 

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Woodlots Weekly for June 2026

Woodlots BC
June 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Woodlots BC has been invited to Victoria to work collaboratively with representatives from the BC Community Forest Association, the First Nations Forestry Council, and government officials in a solutions-focused dialogue to: explore a principled pricing framework that promotes greater equity across woodlots, community forest agreements, and First Nations woodland licences, to address inconsistencies among tenure types that have resulted in inequities within the current system; and understand, articulate, and assess the implications and implementation considerations of various policy options on Woodlot holders. The Province has committed to advancing this work through its Intentions Paper: Modernizing Forest Policy Initiative, with the goal of establishing a more consistent and equitable pricing framework for woodlots, community forest agreements, and First Nations woodland licences. Broader engagement with the woodlot community is tentatively planned for this fall. Woodlots BC are advocating for no changes to tabular rates and continue the 1 CP process on woodlots. 
 

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BC forestry policies destroy priceless values and bias the regulatory system

By Laurisa Dohm
Northern Beat
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

B.C.’s forestry collapse is devastating communities across the province, with provincial policy failures identified as the primary cause. But the dysfunction is causing more than economic losses. It is also destroying two things which are arguably priceless: old growth forests, and a free, fair, and open market.  Old growth logging continues under licences the government has legal authority to restrict. Yet reportedly, less than half of the 2.6 million hectares identified by its own technical advisory panel as most at risk have actually been deferred. Forest protection advocates point to Canfor and West Fraser as the top two private companies logging old growth. What they omit is that Canfor’s tenures were transferred to two bands in 2024, months after West Fraser’s tenures were combined with a different band’s months earlier—tenures the province subsequently increased by more than 2,000 per cent in 2025. In the same timeframe, the mills these companies used to operate have closed at a steady clip.

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Northern Rockies Regional Municipality calling for release of 2024 wildfire investigation

By Tom Summer
CBC News
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Northern Rockies Regional Municipality is calling on the province to release an investigation by the Natural Resource Officers Service into the 2024 Parker Lake wildfire. Mayor Rob Fraser says more than 3,000 people were forced to evacuate for 17 days because of the wildfire and alleges the province is holding back due to a clerical error. … Fraser claims the Natural Resource Officers Service is refusing to release an investigative report due to a clerical error that temporarily left his community out of the Wildfire Act. According to Fraser, his community was listed as the “Town of Fort Nelson” under the provincial Wildfire Act, when they should have been the “Northern Rockies Regional Municipality.” Looking at the governance, the Town of Fort Nelson was amalgamated with the Northern Rockies Regional District in 2009 to become the Northern Rockies Regional Municipality.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province.

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
June 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) is highlighting the growing impact of community forestry across the province, recognizing projects that reduce wildfire risk, improve wildlife habitat and strengthen local economies. At the BC Community Forest Association’s 2026 Conference, FESBC presented its inaugural Community Forest Project of the Year Award to the Kaslo & District Community Forest Society for its “Jimi Crack Corn” project. The latest FESBC newsletter also features updates on fuel reduction work with Nazko First Nation, new federal funding aimed at reducing wood waste and supporting forest resilience, and a safety message from the BC Forest Safety Council encouraging supervisors to recognize early warning signs before serious incidents occur. Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar notes that more than 60 new FESBC-supported projects will build on last year’s wildfire mitigation and fibre utilization efforts, helping create safer, healthier forests and supporting jobs in rural British Columbia.

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Osoyoos Indian Band set to restore native plants, species in wildfire-ravaged forests

By Aaron Hemens
IndigiNews
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Osoyoos Indian Band is working to revitalize forests in its territories that have been ravaged by wildfires — turning them into fire-resistent zones full of biodiversity, wildlife and medicinal plants for its members. The band-owned Nk’Mip Forestry is planning to revive two woodlands located above the First Nation’s reservation in the highlands between Oliver and Mount Baldy — making up just over 40 hectares combined. The forest tenure where the project is located is approximately 50,000 hectares in size, and is co-managed between the Osoyoos Indian Band and Gorman Bros. The two forests — a drier douglas fir ecosystem with ponderosa pine, and a montane spruce ecosystem dominated by dense lodgepole pile further up the hill — were both impacted by the 2021 Nk’Mip Creek Wildfire, which is estimated to have burned just over 20,000 hectares.

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Fix Our Forest Act is no fix

By Roger Sabbadini, professor of biology at San Diego State University
The Bend Bulletin
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Roger Sabbadini

OREGON — I am writing in opposition to a bill with a very misleading title, the Fix Our Forest Act. FOFA has no limits on the types of trees logged (e.g., old growth, tree diameters). It would also allow logging projects up to 15 square miles in size, enabling extreme “thinning” practice that will resemble clearcutting. Further, the bill proposes to reduce public input and oversight in the management direction for public lands. …The bill will also limit judicial review and the ability of the public, organizations, and other stakeholders to file suits. …In Eastern Oregon, less than 10% of the original old growth forests remain after decades of logging. Once all these mature trees are gone, they cannot be replaced and will no longer mitigate climate change.

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Oregon lawsuit could upend federal management of public lands

By Alex Brown
Stateline
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A new lawsuit challenging a logging project in Oregon threatens to unravel the management plans governing hundreds of millions of acres of federal public land. At stake are thousands of leases and permits covering billions of dollars of economic activity — including mining, drilling, grazing, logging, ski resorts, wind and solar projects, outdoor recreation, hunting and fishing. If successful, the lawsuit could throw the management of huge swaths of the West into chaos. Some experts fear the new legal uncertainty around federal agencies’ management authority could unleash a tsunami of lawsuits targeting everything from mining to the conservation of wildlife habitat. “When you throw that whole system into chaos, it’s a problem whether you’re the oil and gas industry or the timber industry,” said Susan Jane Brown, the attorney who filed the lawsuit and serves as principal at Silvix Resources, a nonprofit environmental law firm.

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US Forest Service eyes emergency logging for 5 million acres in Idaho, Montana

The Daily Montanan in the Bonner County Bee
June 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The U.S. Forest Service published an eight-page emergency plan that it says addresses catastrophic wind damage done to federal forest land after two weather emergencies, but environmental watchdog groups say it’s rushed and could result in millions of acres being used for commercial logging with an almost impossibly short public comment period. The project’s scoping document doesn’t disclose which parcels of federal forest land will be logged and treated as part of the emergency plans, but a table shows it could involve more than 5 million acres spanning across Montana and Idaho’s Panhandle. The notice, issued by the USFS Northern Regional office in Missoula, said the “emergency salvage” effort is a response to the straight-line and high wind events in December 2025 and April 2026. The Forest Service said the windstorms created large patches of overturned or “downed” trees.

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South Carolina celebrated the establishment of its sixth state forest

South Carolina Public Radio
June 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The South Carolina Forestry Commission announced more than 1,600 acres of land in Dorchester was transferred from the Open Space Institute. The forested area is called Old Beech Hill State Forest. It sits just east of the Edisto River. Eighty acres within the forest are wetlands. “Today marks an exciting addition to our state forest system,” said Scott Phillips, SC State Forester. “Old Beech Hill State Forest will provide long-term benefits from clean water and wildlife habitat to recreation and sustainable forestry. This milestone reflects the power of partnership and our shared commitment to conserving forests for the benefit of our communities, today and tomorrow.”  …Acquired in March 2026, Old Beech Hill State Forest, named for Beech Hill, an uncharacteristically high and dry part of Dorchester County, comprises 1,643 acres in two parcels containing mostly various-aged pine stands.

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Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences and IKEA launch global research lab on rainforest restoration

SLU, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

For more than 25 years, the IKEA-launched Sow a Seed project has contributed to the restoration of rainforests in Malaysian Borneo. Today marks the launch of a new phase, the Living Rainforest Restoration Lab, shifting focus toward research and knowledge sharing on these vital ecosystems. The journey started in 1998, when IKEA’s founder Ingvar Kamprad initiated what would become Sow a Seed; a long standing and large-scale restoration project in the rainforests of Borneo. Jointly headed by SLU and the Malaysian Sabah Foundation, Sow a Seed is one of the world’s longest standing restorations of its kind. This program is exceptional in its commitment to long-term impact. By combining a rare 25-year legacy of restoration work with a funding model spanning two consecutive decades, it creates a unique platform for generating knowledge that simply cannot emerge from short-term research, says Petter Axelsson, researcher at SLU within the Sow a Seed-programme.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Joint Australia-Canada-United Kingdom Statement on Energy and Climate Cooperation

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
PR Newswire
June 25, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

Julie Dabrusin

Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom recognise the immediacy with which we must act to secure a clean energy future, following a prolonged period of global disruptions to energy security, markets and supply chains. We affirm that accelerating the clean energy transition, and shifting from fossil fuels to clean electricity, will greatly reduce exposure to volatile fossil fuel markets and improve long-term energy supply resilience, affordability, and economic competitiveness. …Our three nations … are rapidly transitioning to decarbonise our economies, powered by clean energy; making record investments in clean energy and electrification…; enhancing our grids to deliver reliable, clean power…, while creating new job opportunities across our regions. … To further these efforts, we have committed to working together on building and contributing to diverse, secure and sustainable supply chains that can power the world with clean energy, including the critical minerals, technologies and components required for grid flexibility, reliability and resilience. 

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Health & Safety

3 dead in plane crash near Fort Simpson, Northwest Territories, fire officials confirm

By Chris Windeyer and Emma Tranter
CBC News
June 25, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Three people are dead after a plane responding to a wildfire near Fort Simpson, N.W.T., crashed on Wednesday evening. N.W.T. Fire said in a news release Thursday afternoon that responders went to the crash site and confirmed the deaths. “Our organization is grieving alongside the families, friends, colleagues, and the broader wildfire community as we process this unthinkable loss,” Mike Westwick, the manager of wildfire prevention and mitigation, said in the release. “We will honour those who lost their lives in the line of duty at the appropriate time and in accordance with the wishes of their families,” Westwick added. The RCMP said they are helping to recover the deceased and the N.W.T coroner’s office is also investigating. …The plane involved was a fixed wing Turbo Commander 690 Bird Dog 104. Bird dog aircraft are small, typically single-engine planes that carry crew who direct air traffic near a fire and coordinate the airtankers.

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Forest Fires

Olympic National Park crews battle 86-acre wildfire sparked by lightning near Mount Olympus

By Adel Toay
King 5 News
June 26, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

Washington — Olympic National Park crews are responding to an 86-acre wildfire sparked by lightning in a remote area west of Mount Olympus, according to park officials. The Mount Tom Creek Fire was reported by backpackers on June 24 after a lightning storm moved through the area June 23. The fire is burning on a steep, densely forested mountainside in the Mount Tom Creek Basin, about 5 miles west-northwest of Mount Olympus. Officials said the fire remained 0% contained as of Thursday. No structures have been damaged and a full suppression strategy is being used. Fire managers have deployed aviation and ground resources, including Type 1 and Type 2 helicopters, reconnaissance aircraft, wildland fire engines and hand crews. A Type 3 Incident Management Team is scheduled to assume command of the fire Friday. The fire is located about 6 miles from the Hoh Rain Forest administrative site. The Hoh Rain Forest Visitor Center, campground and trails remain open.

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