USFS Reorganization — implications unclear

Salt Lake City; by invictus323 via Wikimedia

In a press release on 31 March, 2026, the USDA announced major changes to the USFS structure. Agency headquarters will be moved to Salt Lake City. They point out that nearly 90% of USFS land is west of the Mississippi … but promise to sustain engagement in the Southeast (America’s “wood basket) by creating a regional office there. Furthermore, they will change the current regional organization to a state-based one; they plan to create 15 state directorships. State directors will serve as national leaders with primary oversight of forest supervisors, operational priorities, & relationships with states, tribes, & other partners. Each state office will include a small leadership support team responsible for functions such as legislative affairs, communications, & intergovernmental coordination.

There will still be some “operational service centers” in other cities; that for research will be in Fort Collins. The goal is to unify research priorities, accelerate the application of science to management decisions, & reduce administrative duplication. Information on which facilities will be retained or closed is available at this webpage. (I could not open this site.)

No specific information is provided re: forest health management program.

Posted by Faith Campbell

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For a detailed discussion of the policies and practices that have allowed these pests to enter and spread – and that do not promote effective restoration strategies – review the Fading Forests report at http://treeimprovement.utk.edu/FadingForests.htm

Or

https://fadingforests.org

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