Forest Service Will Close Research Stations That Study Wildfire Risk
Source: NYT
The U.S. Forest Service is closing 57 of its 77 research facilities in 31 states under a reorganization plan announced this week, threatening science that looked at how wildfires, drought, pests and global warming are putting pressure on forests.
The agency plans to consolidate its research division into a centralized office in Fort Collins, Colo., and move field researchers to locations in nearby states. But employees said they feared the move would lead many scientists to leave instead. The reorganization will also move the agencys headquarters to Salt Lake City from Washington, affecting 260 employees.
Many of the research facilities are at universities where Forest Service scientists have access to laboratories and computers or at experimental forests where scientists can monitor the effects of environmental changes over long periods of time. They also investigate logging techniques, endangered plant and animal species, and how forests grow back after devastating fires.
The agency is closing six research and development facilities in California, five in Mississippi, four in Michigan and three in Utah, among others.
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Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/03/climate/forest-service-research-stations.html
Did Trump get a "Burn it down" order from Putin?
yellow dahlia
(5,938 posts)Your question is a good one. Who does it benefit? Certainly not the American people. Certainly not this planet.
Norrrm
(5,084 posts)A lot of our nation's forests are federal property.
chowder66
(12,257 posts)jeffreyi
(2,575 posts)Forest science, range science, wildlife, wildfire research, long term monitoring, etc., etc. respected the world over. Productive, positive collaboration with top universities. Many, many benefits to the taxpayer, to the economy, our quality of life, and to our public lands. This wanton vandalism, possibly irreversible, should not be possible.
WestMichRad
(3,264 posts)cut them all down before they have a chance to burn.
electric_blue68
(26,891 posts)If anything, we could probably use a few more; not less!!!
Re: Putin; don't know the timescale but, more serious degradation of our forests due to this diminished monitoring/study of effects might eventually nudge weather patterns that (?) could effect Russia. Then again, how much would Putin care, or still be alive.
trusty elf
(7,550 posts)