USFS Reorganization Boondoggle

Deadline: Ongoing Action

Why this Matters

From the USDA's Factsheet: "the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Forest Service announced it will move its headquarters to Salt Lake City, Utah. Secretary Brooke L. Rollins commented: "Establishing a western headquarters in Salt Lake City and streamlining how the Forest Service is organized will position the Chief and operation leaders closer to the landscapes we manage and the people who depend on them. This includes supporting our timber growers across the country, including those in the Southeast by prioritizing a regional office and promoting policies that boost timber production, lowering costs for consumers. In the past year we have returned the Forest Service to the leading forestry and fire management organization in the world. Proper forest management means a healthy and productive forest system that provides affordable, quality lumber to build homes right here in America and it means preserving and protecting the beautiful landscapes we are blessed with across this great country."

HOWEVER wonderful Rollins' announcement may sound to some in the forest products industry, the move comes with dire consequences for the environment, climate, ecotourism, and all the creatures that depend on our forests for survival.  Additionally, it could not come at a worse time for the fire season and a drought year, when regional offices who process firefighter staffing are no more. USFS manages weather and climate observing networks, operates fire weather forecasting centers, and conducts climate and fire weather and behavior research. While the administration assures this is a simple consolidation to a single location in Fort Collins, CO, as part of the planned reorganization, all of the more than 50 USFS research and science stations will close. Undoubtedly the impacts of this will hurt forecasting and climate observing/reporting for 2026.

Essentially, the Trump administration is dismantling the U.S. Forest Service. 193 million acres of public land (bigger than Texas) is being handed over to political operatives and industry insiders. It is important to recognize that this massive restructuring of our national forestry agency is being done by executive action, with no action being taken by Congress.  The Trump administration is replacing all of it — the offices, the scientists, the institutional knowledge, the professional independence — with fifteen political appointees called “state directors,” embedded in state capitals alongside the very governors, legislators, and industry lobbyists who have spent their careers demanding that the Forest Service log more, protect less, and get out of the way.  No doubt, just as the war in Iran, Congress will do little to stop this.

But we are not powerless! We need pressure and we need it now.

Call your senators. Call your representative. Not next week or later. Now.

Tell them this is not a reorganization — it’s the destruction of a federal agency by executive fiat and that Congress must intervene. Tell them to block all funding for this relocation and restructuring until the full implications have been studied, debated, and voted on by the people’s elected representatives.

Tell them you know what happened to the BLM. Tell them 87% staff loss is not efficiency. Tell them that three people showing up to Grand Junction is not “moving closer to the land.” Tell them that if they allow this to proceed, the Forest Service will suffer the same fate at twenty times the scale, and the blood will be on their hands.

Tell them you know the endgame. Tell them this is the on-ramp to land transfer. Tell them that handing the headquarters to Utah while Utah is actively suing to seize your public land is not a coincidence — it’s a tell.

And tell every conservation organization, every outdoor recreation company, every hunting and fishing group, every single person who has ever set foot on a national forest and felt something — tell them the time for polite statements and “concern” is over. The building is on fire. The arsonists are inside. And if we don’t act now, there will be very little left to save.

Stay loud. Stay angry. Stay relentless.

They want us tired and resigned. Don’t give them that satisfaction.

These forests belong to you. Fight for them like your life depends on it.

Because it does.

Steps to Take

Step 1

send Option 1 to your favorite outdoor clothing provider.  Here's a list to get you started, but others can be found by looking at the bottom of your provider's website, for "contact us" information

REI: rei.com/help/contact-us
Patagonia: patagonia.com/contact
The North Face: thenorthface.com/help
Columbia Sportswear: columbia.com/help
Vail Resorts: vailresorts.com/en/contact
Alterra Mountain Company: alterramtn.co/en/contact-us
National Ski Areas Association: nsaa.org/NSAA/Contact/NSAA/About/Contact_Us.aspx
Orvis: orvis.com/contact-us.html
Sitka Gear: support.sitkagear.com/hc/en-us/requests/new

Example: On REI’s website click the blue chat bubble in the bottom right corner, then click the green “Chat With Us” button at the bottom and then paste the message there.

Most of these sites work the same way. They make you go through chat or a phone call. If that’s too much, go to their social media pages and drop this message in the comments on several of their posts. That works just as well.

Ten minutes. Do it today. Then share this so others do too. A handful of emails does nothing. Thousands change minds. Be one of thousands

 

Step 2

Contact your legislator and send them Option 2 (or your own text)

 

 

 

 

 

Step 3

Take a deep breath.

When you can, visit our national forests and celebrate their beauty and diversity.

Never give up!

Sample Text

Option 1

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Option 2

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Find Your Legislators

Not sure who your legislators are or how to reach them? Use the links below to find your representatives and their contact information.

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