The U.S. Forest Service plans to shutter its nine regional offices over the next year, giving political appointees in Washington, DC more control over local forest management decisions. The announcement came as part of a larger reorganization of the Agriculture department, which is home to the Forest Service. While the USDA plans to force thousands of employees out of Washington and into five new regional hubs, the Forest Service, which already has nine regions, will close its regional offices.
Former Forest Service Chief Dale Bosworth told Mountain Journal that the move didn't make sense.
“I heard rumors a couple months ago of consideration of dropping to three regional offices from nine,” Bosworth said. “But I hadn’t heard of doing away with regional offices completely. We’ve got 120-some national forests and administrative units. Do you want all those people reporting to the chief?”
As the Missoula Current points out, regional forest offices often serve as a buffer between politicians and individual forest supervisors. Eliminating the regional foresters will add political pressure to the forest managers.
Interior DOGE operative to step down
Tyler Hassen, the oil executive who Elon Musk installed as the acting head of Policy, Management, and Budget at the Interior department, is leaving the agency this week. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum had given Hassen sweeping powers to overhaul the department. During congressional testimony earlier this month, Burgum admitted he didn't know how many wildfire-certified "red card" holders had left Interior on Hassen's watch.
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