Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

Roseburg Rep responds to more Roseburg Forest Products layoffs

NBC News
February 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

ROSEBURG, Oregon – Oregon lawmakers are reacting to another round of layoffs at Roseburg Forest Products. The company announced its third round of layoffs in six months on Wednesday, impacting approximately 146 positions at its Riddle plywood facility. The latest cuts bring Roseburg Forest Products’ total job losses to nearly 400 since September. Roseburg Republican State Representative Virgle Osborne, who worked for the company decades ago, said timber businesses have been forced to move away from what was once their core focus due to environmental regulations. “It has made timber more expensive. It has made the federal cut less, and we’re not able to be competitive as we used to be competitive. …Representative Osborne says the company has done what it can to adjust to the reality of the timber industry by moving toward engineered wood products and mass timber.

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Layoffs expected at Riddle Plywood facility in early April: What to know

By Aimee Plante
KOIN 6 News
February 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

PORTLAND, Ore. – Layoffs are expected at the beginning of April for Roseburg Forest Products Co.’s Riddle Plywood facility, according to a WARN notice filed this week. The notice, filed Feb. 4, says the company expects to permanently lay off 146 team members at the Riddle By-Pass Road location, though the facility will remain open. These layoffs are expected to take place after a 60-day WARN period. The company said April 5 “will be the last day of work for a majority of the affected team members before the layoff and that the remaining affected team members, if any, will be within 14 days of that date.” Impacted positions span a number of job titles, though the majority consist of Layup WAT Operators, Finish End WAT Operators, and Common Laborers.

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2027 Forest Products EXPO Heading to Savannah

By Christian Moises, Communications Manager
Southern Forest Products Association
February 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition (EXPO), hosted by the Southern Forest Products Association, is headed to the Savannah Convention Center in Savannah, Georgia, from August 18-20, 2027. “EXPO flourished in Nashville at the Music City Center in 2023 and 2025, exceeding expectations and showcasing the strength of the longest-running forest products show in the industry,” said Eric Gee, SFPA’s executive director. “In mid‑2025, SFPA began working to secure dates for the 2027 EXPO. Due to the increased popularity of Nashville as an event destination, traditional summer dates with the Music City Center were not available.” …“Savannah places EXPO in the heart of the Southern Pine lumber community, while preserving our commitment to a high-quality, accessible, and cost-conscious event for exhibitors and attendees,” Gee said. Located on the Savannah River across from the city’s historic and tourist district, there is plenty to do. Booth sales are scheduled to open in May 2026.

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Roseburg Forest Products to cut 146 positions at Riddle Plywood facility

By Andrew Griffin
The News-Review Today
February 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

RIDDLE, Oregon — Roseburg Forest Products (RFP) announced it will cut 146 positions from its Riddle Plywood facility, moving all of its specialty plywood production services to the Coquille Plywood facility. The staffing reduction went into effect Wednesday. The reduction comes as part of a “strategic realignment of production” at the two facilities. As Riddle Plywood facility has expanded its veneer production services, the Coquille Plywood plant has become RFP’s primary specialty plywood operation. Team members impacted by the reduction will receive continued health care coverage and 60 days of compensation. …Roseburg Forest Products President and CEO Stuart Gray said. “This production realignment improves how our veneer and fiber resources flow into our core product segments and is essential to Roseburg remaining a competitive.” …The decision comes after RFP discontinued operations at its Dillard hardwood plywood facility.

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Boom or dust? How tariffs are helping this Maine sawmill but creating more uncertainty for others

By Emmett Gartner
The Maine Monitor
February 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Duties on Canadian imports are driving up domestic sales at some Maine lumber companies. …Protection from historically lower Canadian lumber prices has given Pleasant River Lumber the confidence to add an additional manufacturing shift in Enfield, according to co-owner Jason Brochu. Photo by Katherine Emery. …Historically Canadian companies have both outbid them for timber harvested in Maine and undercut American lumber prices when they export the finished lumber product back across the border. …An industry analyst and two other mill leaders said that inflation and a sputtering housing market make it unclear whether the tariffs will have a positive or negative effect on business in the long run. The effects of the tariffs will also vary based on the different products sawmills make. …Sawmills rely on certainty, said Alden Robbins, of Robbins Lumber, and neither the markets nor foreign trade relationships have been stable recently.

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Hardwood built Kentucky. Now, the industry is at risk of collapse

By James Wells, GreenTree Forest Products
The Courier Journal
February 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

On the ground in Kentucky, the consequences are devastating: sawmills shutting down nearly every week, skilled workers losing good-paying jobs and spreading ripple effects. …For much of the second half of the twentieth century, our mill and dozens of others across Eastern Kentucky produced Appalachian hardwood lumber used to make furniture, cabinets, flooring and countless other products that furnished American homes. Hardwood was not just a commodity; it was an economic engine, a cultural cornerstone for Kentucky. Today, it is hard to believe that this legacy industry is at real risk of collapse. …The offshoring of the US furniture industry roughly 25 years ago sharply reduced domestic demand for hardwoods. The 2008 recession deepened the damage, while cheaper substitute products steadily flooded the market. Then came the trade war with China — delivering a fatal blow to many family-owned sawmills and leaving the rest of the industry reeling.

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Finance & Economics

U.S. Lumber Coalition Applauds Treasury Secretary Bessent For Stating the Facts Regarding Softwood Lumber

The US Lumber Coalition
February 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, during a recent Congressional hearing, stated the simple facts regarding softwood lumber prices: prices are at historical lows and are driven by supply and demand factors… they not driven by President Trump’s implementing additional tariff measures. …”It is unfortunate that the misleading campaign by the NAHB and Canada attacking President Trump’s enforcement and tariff measures, which are designed to help the US become self-sufficient in its lumber needs, continues to be echoed by others,” added van Heyningen. …The cost of lumber makes up less than 2% of the total cost of a new home, and hence never has and never will be a factor in housing affordability. …Canadian softwood lumber companies pay virtually all of the duties and tariffs, not U.S. consumers. …(note: approximately 93% of duty deposits paid through 2023, i.e., $5.8 billion, is slated to be liquidated into the US Treasury.)

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Lumber Futures Drop to Near 4-Week Lows

Trading Economics
February 5, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures slipped below $590 per thousand board feet, the lowest level in nearly four weeks, as housing demand weakened and earlier restocking momentum faded. Demand softened as financing costs edged higher and housing activity cooled, with US pending home sales plunging 9.3% month on month in December 2025, removing a key source of construction and renovation related wood consumption ahead of the spring building season. At the same time, mills continued running to rebuild inventories after the winter squeeze, increasing physical availability while distributors reported quieter order books. The combination of softer demand and rising availability encouraged position unwinds after January’s rally, with falling volumes and open interest amplifying the price decline. [END]

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Weaker Demand, Unchanged Lending Conditions for Residential Mortgages in Fourth Quarter

By Eric Lynch
The NAHB Eye on Housing
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Lending standards for most types of residential mortgages were essentially unchanged but overall demand was weaker in the fourth quarter of 2025, according to the recent release of the Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey (SLOOS). However, for commercial real estate (CRE) loans, lending standards for multifamily were looser, while standards for construction & development were essentially unchanged. Demand for construction & development loans was stronger, while demand for multifamily loans was essentially unchanged for the quarter. After three consecutive 25 basis point cuts to finish 2025, the Federal Reserve decided to maintain its key short-term interest rate (i.e., Federal Funds) unchanged during its first meeting of 2026. …Given the current macroeconomic landscape and a change in leadership at the Fed as Jerome Powell’s term as Chair ends in May, NAHB anticipates that any further rate cuts will occur in the latter half of this year.

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US Builders’ Top Challenges for 2026

By Ashok Chaluvadi
NAHB Eye on Housing
February 5, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The most significant challenge builders faced in 2025 was high interest rates, as reported by 84% of builders in the latest NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index survey. A smaller, albeit still significant share of 65% expect interest rates to remain a problem in 2026. The next four most serious issues builders faced in 2025 were buyers expecting prices/interest rates to decline (81%), concern about employment/economic situation (65%), the cost/availability of developed lots (63%), and negative media reports making buyers cautious (62%). Builders expect these challenges to persist with limited improvement in 2026. In addition to those top tier challenges, 54% to 61% of builders also reported facing serious problems in 2025 with cost/availability of labor (61%), rising inflation in the US economy (59%) gridlock/uncertainty in Washington (58%), impact/hook-up/inspection and other fees (57%), and local/state environmental regulations and policies (54%). Looking ahead at 2026, fewer builders expect high interest rates (65%) rising inflation in the US economy (46%) to be a significant problem.

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US Mortgage Rates Declined Despite Higher Treasury Yields

By Catherine Koh
NAHB Eye on Housing
February 4, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Long-term mortgage rates continued to decline in January. According to Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.10% last month, 9 basis points (bps) lower than December. Meanwhile, the 15-year rate declined 4 bps to 5.44%. Compared to a year ago, the 30-year rate is lower by 86 bps. The 15-year rate is also lower by 72 bps. The 10-year Treasury yield, a key benchmark for long-term borrowing, averaged 4.20% in January – an increase of 8 bps from the previous month, but remained considerably lower than last year by 43 bps. While mortgage rates typically move in tandem with the treasury yields, the spread between the two narrowed during the month. Reports that the Trump administration encouraged Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to expand purchases of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) boosted demand for MBS, pushing mortgage rates lower. However, treasury yields rose sharply in the final week of January from global and fiscal pressures. 

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Affordable Housing Starts in the US Labor Market

By Kathryn Anne Edwards, labor economist
Bloomberg
February 5, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

When it comes to housing affordability, the logic of “build build build” is straightforward enough: Housing is too expensive. If there were more of it, prices would fall. …Homebuilders are even pushing a plan for a million new affordable houses. …Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. The problem of housing affordability is much bigger than insufficient supply; it’s a mismatch with demand. And that demand is driven by income inequality that has seen soaring income growth at the top and tepid growth (or even stagnation) in the middle. In other words: The way to improve housing affordability is to reduce income inequality. …What’s needed are policies that increase income for households at the bottom and middle. Rather than boosting the housing supply in the hope that they benefit, the answer is to fix the labor market to make sure that they do. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Sustainable and supportive timber and wood products

By Kelly Pau
The Architect’s Newspaper
February 10, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

As mass timber continues to grow in popularity in the US, manufacturers are evolving the scale and sourcing of wood production to meet rising demand. Mercer Mass Timber – Mercer Mass Timber recently helped complete the pictured Anthony Timberlands Center for Design and Materials Innovation, which uses Southern Yellow Pine CLT at its core. Mid-Atlantic Timberframes – For an addition to Pennsylvania’s Lancaster Airport, Mid-Atlantic Timberframes used Southern Yellow Pine LaminatedDecking to merge the new construction with glulam structures from the 1980s. …Sylva Thermally Modified Red Oak – This thermally modified wood cladding is sourced from abundant and sustainably grown U.S. forests, which helped make it a winner in the AN2025 Best of Products Awards. …Mass Timber Modules – Kalesnikoff designed cross-laminated-timber modules to build Integrated Design Cubed’s Knight Building, a 95-bedroom employee housing complex in Montana, which was constructed in 11 months thanks to this smart-timber design.

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Why Architects Are Returning to Timber: The Renaissance of Wooden Windows in High-End Home Design

FINE Magazine
February 8, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Walk through any design-forward neighbourhood… and you’ll notice something the catalogues haven’t caught up with yet. The windows are changing. After decades dominated by vinyl, aluminium, and composite frames, timber is making a decisive return to high-end residential architecture. And the architects driving this shift aren’t motivated by nostalgia. They’re choosing wood because, for the homes they’re designing, nothing else performs quite the same way. The broader design world has been moving in this direction for several years. Mass timber construction, reclaimed wood interiors, rammed earth walls, natural stone — the 2025–2026 architectural conversation is dominated by what designers call “material honesty.” The idea is straightforward: use materials that are what they appear to be. No laminate pretending to be oak. …The knock against timber windows has always been practical: they need maintenance, they warp, they cost more. Two decades ago, much of that was fair. Modern engineered timber has changed the equation.

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UC Berkeley’s mass timber research is impacting the decarbonization of California’s construction industry

University of California, Berkeley
February 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Drawing on research developed by Paul Mayencourt’s team at the UC Berkeley Wood Lab, Mad River Mass Timber has emerged as California’s first producer of dowel-laminated mass timber, which has the potential to improve forest health, mitigate wildfire risk, and accelerate the production of affordable housing — while also contributing toward the long-term goal of decarbonizing the environment.  With guidance from Assistant Professor Paul Mayencourt and the UC Berkeley Wood Lab, Humboldt County’s Mad River Mass Timber is pioneering the commercial manufacture of dowel-laminated timber (DLT) in the state. The first vertically integrated producer of mass timber in California, MRMT transforms waste wood from our forests into construction-ready building panels. …Until now, builders in California have had to source mass timber from Washington or Canada. MRMT’s locally produced DLT can play a key role in the state’s transition to low-carbon construction methods. 

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Wildfire home insurance under fire in Southern California

International Association of Fire and Rescue Services
February 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

California’s wildfire insurance crisis intensified this week as major insurers faced renewed scrutiny over denied or delayed payouts, while regulators and lawmakers moved to address mounting consumer complaints. The Los Angeles Times reported that insurers defending their claims‑handling practices are under pressure after fire survivors said they were required to produce extensive documentation — including itemized inventories and receipts — before receiving payments, even when their homes were completely destroyed. Lawmakers criticized the practice as burdensome and insensitive to victims who lost everything in the fires.  According to the Guardian, the industry’s retreat from high‑risk regions has accelerated, with non‑renewals and steep premium increases affecting thousands of homeowners across Southern California. Some residents reported annual premiums rising into the tens of thousands of dollars as insurers adopted increasingly aggressive wildfire‑risk scoring models. 

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Michigan Awards $350K to Jump-Start Nine Mass Timber Building Projects

The Iron Mountain Daily News
February 7, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

LANSING, Michigan – A state program to aid mass timber projects in Michigan has been extended for the Upper Peninsula after the region submitted no applications for funding in 2026. …A supplemental call for proposals makes available $50,000 through March 2. Those awards will be announced March 16. The awardees are:

  • Genesis, Highland Park: $60,000. Reuse of an existing 2-story apartment building.
  • CoHab House, Lansing: $60,000. Part of the larger Churchhill Gardens project.
  • Daniels and Zermack Architects: $45,000. Renovation and addition.
  • Sam Beauford Woodworking Inst: $45,000. Educational facility for skilled trades.
  • The Hive Building B, Detroit: $40,000. The Hive on Gratiot, six-story structure.
  • Bella Vita Condos, Traverse City: $25,000. A mixed-use, multistory development
  • Kent County Admin Building, Grand Rapids: $25,000. 
  • MSU Research Foundation, East Lansing: $25,000. New institutional project.
  • Mixed-Use Building, Mt. Pleasant: $25,000. Hybrid construction types.

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Forestry

SFI Launches Interactive Online Tool to Support Alignment of SFI Standards and Leading Global Sustainability Reporting Frameworks

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON, D.C. and OTTAWA, ON —The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) announced the launch of a new interactive online SFI Sustainability Framework Crosswalk tool to assess and interpret how the SFI Standards align with leading sustainability reporting frameworks, including the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD), the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), and the European Union Taxonomy. While these frameworks have unique objectives and audiences, they are striving to provide climate, nature, and biodiversity assurances. The SFI Standards were designed to deliver exactly this- providing detailed, comprehensive and rigorous requirements that are data-driven and third-party audited. …“The Sustainability Crosswalk enables SFI-certified organizations to easily demonstrate how their SFI certification aligns with key sustainability reporting frameworks,” said Jason Metnick, President of SFI. 

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John Deere brings back nearly 250 Iowa employees

Brownfield Ag News
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

John Deere says it’s bringing back 245 employees who were previously laid off at some of the company’s facilities in Iowa. A company spokesperson says 99 team members have been called back to work at the construction and forestry plants in Davenport and Dubuque. They will return to work in mid-February. “As demand increases, these callbacks help ensure we have skilled teams in place to support production across our construction and forestry operations,” said Mark Dickson, vice president, construction and forestry manufacturing operations. John Deere says an additional 146 employees are coming back in early March at the Waterloo Tractor Operations. “These callbacks at Waterloo Tractor Operations reflect the production needs driven by increased customer demand. We’re excited to recall experienced employees to support our factories,” said Fabio Castro, Waterloo Works vice president and factory manager.

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Northward Shift of Boreal Tree Cover Confirmed By Satellite Record

By Chris Burns
NASA Scientific Visualization Studio
February 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

For the first time, researchers have been able to confirm that our planet’s boreal forests are on the move. Using nearly a quarter million Landsat satellite images spanning 36 years, scientists have confirmed for the first time that Earth’s boreal forest—the planet’s largest forested biome—is shifting northward, revealing unprecedented changes in this critical ecosystem that stores more than a third of the world’s forests and helps regulate our global climate. [5 min. video]

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Interior Dept blazes ahead on unified wildland firefighting agency, without Congress endorsing plans

By Jory Heckman
The Federal News Network
February 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Interior Department is blazing ahead with a reorganization plan that will bring all of its wildland firefighting operations into a single agency. Starting next week, all the department’s wildland fire employees and programs will be moved into a new Wildland Fire Service. Congress did not approve funds for this consolidation of federal firefighting programs into one agency. The Wildland Fire Service also stops short of merging wildland fire personnel or programs from the USDA’s Forest Service with those same resources at the Interior Department. An internal memo sent to staff on Monday states the Wildland Fire Service “will unify wildland fire management within DOI only.” According to the memo, obtained by Federal News Network, the Wildland Fire Service will “align operations” with USDA through shared procurement, predictive services, research, and policy reforms.

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Forest Carbon and Climate Program receives two Sustainable Forestry Initiative awards to advance climate-smart forestry

Michigan State University
February 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Michigan State University Forest Carbon and Climate Program, in partnership with the Sustainable Forestry Initiative and American Forests, has been awarded two grants from the USDA Forest Service Forest Landowner Support and the Doris Duke Foundation to support “Advancing Climate-Smart and Carbon Stewardship Practices with Large Landowners in the United States”. This project will advance a regionally specific decision support process that considers factors like site considerations, climate-induced threats, and adaptation approaches to support resilient and productive forests and the forestry sector. …the FCCP will review regionally specific carbon stewardship practices and strategies that consider trends in carbon, biodiversity, and habitat connectivity. Additionally, the FCCP team will work with SFI partners to advance collective knowledge on Climate Smart Forestry Climate Informed Principles and Practices.  As a part of this project, SFI is offering a payment-for-practice funding program to advance carbon stewardship activities in the Lake States and Northwest U.S. 

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Wildfire Urgency Unites Congress. The ‘Fix Our Forests’ Act Does Not.

By Katie Surma
Inside Climate News
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Lawmakers from both parties agreed at a congressional hearing Tuesday that the federal government must act to address the growing threat of catastrophic wildfires, but they were sharply divided over how, and whether pending legislation known as the Fix Our Forests Act offers the right path forward.  The House of Representatives passed the FOFA legislation in January 2025, and its companion bill is pending in the Senate. …Republican supporters of the bill championed its focus on fast-tracking the thinning and clearing of forests on large tracks of land by making exceptions to requirements in bedrock environmental laws. They argue that those steps are a fix for intensifying fires. …Democrats on the House Committee sharply criticized parts of the wildfire bill, arguing that it unnecessarily erodes environmental safeguards and expands logging, despite limited evidence that either makes communities safer. …Outside of the hearing, scientists and environmental advocates also criticized parts of FOFA.

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Proposed forest timber project includes Mesa County acreage

By Dinnis Webb
The Daily Sentinel
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

COLORADO — The U.S. Forest Service is proposing logging southwest of Glenwood Springs, involving about 2,600 acres in what’s known as the Fourmile area along the borders of Pitkin, Mesa and Garfield counties. The White River National Forest’s proposal includes acreage in all three counties. It involves selective thinning and vegetation clearing in two treatment areas and along several roads to improve forest health, reduce wildfire risk and provide timber, the Forest Service said in a news release. “The timber treatments would improve the forest’s ability to withstand and recover from drought and insect outbreaks by creating more diversity in the size and ages of trees. Additionally, work along roads will strengthen predetermined areas where firefighters could more effectively engage wildfires,” the Forest Service said in its release. …“Active forest management is an important tool for maintaining healthy forests,” Acting Aspen-Sopris District Ranger Jennifer Schuller said in the release. 

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Montana forester on timber lawsuits: ‘Judges shouldn’t be managing our forests’

By Duncan Adams
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MISSOULA, Montana — Forester Sean Steinebach felt stunned when US District Court Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula vacated a federal magistrate judge’s favorable recommendations about the proposed South Plateau timber project. “Judge Molloy is a thorn in my side,” said Steinebach, outreach forester for Sun Mountain Lumber, based in Deer Lodge. …Molloy’s ruling was filed Dec. 11, vacating March 31 recommendations by Magistrate Judge Kathleen DeSoto that had allowed the project to proceed. Sun Mountain Lumber operates a sawmill in Deer Lodge and one in Livingston. …Steinebach said incessant lawsuits by environmental groups like the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Council on Wildlife and Fish sabotage timber projects, threaten sawmill communities, loggers and others. …One key issue for Judge Molloy was secure habitat for grizzly bears, but Canada lynx habitat was also a concern. Both are considered threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.

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‘Ticking environmental time bomb.’ Illegal cannabis farms poison California’s forests.

By Rachel Becker
SF Gate
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©California Fish & Wildlife

Law enforcement raided the illegal cannabis operation in Shasta-Trinity National Forest months before, but rotting potatoes still sat on the growers’ makeshift kitchen worktop, waiting to be cooked. Ecologist Greta Wengert stared down the pockmarked hillside at a pile of pesticide sprayers left behind, long after the raid. Wild animals had gnawed through the pressurized canisters, releasing the chemicals inside. “They’re just these little death bombs, waiting for any wildlife that is going to investigate,” said Wengert, co-founder of the Integral Ecology Research Center, a non-profit that studies the harms caused by cannabis grows on public lands. For all her stoic professionalism, she sounded a little sad. For over a decade, Wengert and her colleagues have warned that illegal cannabis grows like this one dangerously pollute California’s public lands and pristine watersheds, with lasting consequences for ecosystems, water and wildlife.

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Where fires used to be frequent, old forests now face high risk of devastating blazes

By Steve Lundeberg
Oregon State University
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

CORVALLIS, Ore. – A new analysis shows that the Pacific Northwest’s mature and old-growth forests are most at risk of severe wildfire in areas that historically burned frequently at lower severity. The study by scientists at Oregon State University and USDA Forest Service Research & Development is important because those forests are culturally, economically and ecologically significant, supporting biodiversity while storing vast amounts of carbon, and they are under increasing threat of stand-replacing wildfire. …the research highlights the impact of fire exclusion by showing that 75% of the forest areas with the biggest risk of severe wildfire are places that used to see widespread low- and mixed-severity fires. The exclusion of fire from Northwest landscapes began with the disruption of Indigenous fire stewardship, the researchers say. Indigenous peoples were forcibly removed from their lands in the 1850s, and putting out wildfires became federal policy following the Great Fire of 1910…

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World Forestry Center Announces 2026 Free Day Series in Celebration of 60th Anniversary

By World Forestry Center
Oregon Business
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

To mark its 60th anniversary, World Forestry Center is launching a special Free Day Series in 2026, offering six free community days throughout the year as a way of thanking the public for six decades of support and engagement. This series invites visitors of all ages to explore the museum, participate in hands-on activities, and connect with partners focused on forestry, wildfire preparedness, and environmental education. “These Free Days reflect our commitment to making forest education accessible to everyone,” said Alli Gannett, Director of Communications. “As we celebrate 60 years, we are proud to welcome the community in for meaningful, engaging experiences that honor our past and look toward the future of our forests.” The Free Day Series is generously presented by Hampton Lumber. “World Forestry Center is one of the few places where complex forest topics become something people of all ages can easily dive into,” said Kristin Rasmussen, Director of Public Affairs & Communications. 

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Washington plan to kill barred owls a futile waste of money

By Ann Donnelly, Clark Country Republican Party
The Columbian
February 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Quietly, garnering little public attention, armed federal agents of the US Fish and Wildlife Service are seeking to shoot every barred owl in Pacific Northwest forests. The grisly plan exemplifies government at its most misguided. Barred owls are being condemned for being invasive. But are they? They have been present in Pacific Northwest forests for 130 years. Barred owls are prolific and adaptable. The spotted owl is neither. It has been listed as a threatened species since 1990. Spotted owls have benefited from decades of restrictions. The limits have been costly for our region’s timber industry and rural communities. Yet the spotted owl population has not rebounded. …Exterminating the barred owl has been criticized as futile, inhumane and costly by bipartisan coalitions of Senate and House members, by animal rights advocates, and Audubon Society chapters. …Secretary Burgum should end the plan and preserve owl habitats and the timber industry.

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University of Oregon research overturns long-held ideas about forest fires in the western Cascades

By Karen Richards
KLCC Public Radio
February 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

University of Oregon Assistant Research Professor James Johnston said he was taught that when a large fire burned a moist, Western Cascade forest to the ground, and the area didn’t burn for hundreds of years afterward, that’s what created a complex, old-growth landscape. Instead, his study found that ancient tree stumps in the Mount Hood and Willamette National Forests had burn scars from multiple fires over their long lives. It’s the first time tree-ring scars have been used to document fire records in the region. Johnston said forests are complex because of—not in spite of—lower-severity wildfires which don’t kill many of the trees. …Johnston said to figure out the best ways to foster healthy forests, relatively recent upheavals also need to be considered. Those include clearcuts, human infrastructure at the margins of forests, and hotter and drier weather patterns.

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Washington State Lawmakers Consider Adding Tribal Members to State Board Guiding Logging and Land Management

By Aspen Ford
Daily Fly
February 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

OLYMPIA, WA – Two Washington tribal leaders could soon sit on the state’s Board of Natural Resources, which guides logging sales and other management decisions on public land. Sen. Claudia Kauffman, a Democrat and first Native American woman to serve in the state Senate, proposed Senate Bill 5838. On Monday, it was voted out of the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources. The bill originally called for only one tribal representative, but it was changed to two members as it moved through the committee process. The proposal is backed by Public Lands Commissioner Dave Upthegrove, who chairs the board and leads the Department of Natural Resources. The department requested the legislation. If enacted, the governor would appoint a tribal representative from each side of the Cascades… Eligible tribal members must hold an elected position in a federally recognized tribe whose reservation or treaty-ceded lands are in Washington.

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Federal land seizure advocates, you can’t log your way out of wildfire

By Bryan Clark
Idaho Statesman
February 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Anytime someone talks about shifting management of federal lands to Idaho, know that they have a bigger goal in mind. In a recent interview on The Ranch Podcast, Rep. Jordan Redman, R-Coeur d’Alene, was frank about his goals for public lands in Idaho. He said his father, former Rep. Eric Redman, dreamed of Idaho taking ownership of federal lands, and his goal is the same. The first step is for Idaho to manage public lands for a bit, then the state takes ownership of them. “How do we get that federal land back in ownership for the state?” Rep. Jordan Redman said. Back? It should be said that Idaho has never owned federal land. Redman should try reading the Constitution he swore to uphold: “… the people of the state of Idaho do agree and declare that we forever disclaim all right and title to the unappropriated public lands lying within the boundaries thereof … .” You can’t get back what you never owned; you can only take it. In service of the goal of taking federal land, Redman made a familiar argument.

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Work continues on project to protect Baker City watershed from fire

By Jayson Jacoby
Baker City Herald
February 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Baker City, Oregon — Baker County Commissioner Christina Witham lauded the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest for cutting and piling trees southwest of Baker City, the start of a project that will continue for several years with a goal of reducing the risk of a wildfire in the city’s watershed. “It’s looking really nice,” Witham said during commissioners’ meeting Wednesday morning, Feb. 4. Witham, whose focus areas as a commissioner include natural resources, said she recently toured some of the work areas with Forest Service officials. …According to the Wallowa-Whitman, the project, which totals about 23,000 acres, is designed not only to reduce the fire risk within the watershed, but also to curb the threat of a fire spreading into the watershed, particularly from the south, a path that summer lightning storms often follow.

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University of Kentucky taps Steven Price to lead Forestry and Natural Resources Department

By Christopher Carney
University of Kentucky, College of Agriculture, Food & Environment
February 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Steven Price

The University of Kentucky Office of the Provost has recently appointed Steven Price as Chair of the Department of Forestry and Natural Resources (FNR) at the Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment. Price’s administrative appointment begins Feb. 1 and concludes Jan. 31, 2032. “Dr. Price is an outstanding scholar, mentor and leader who understands the critical role forests and natural resources play in Kentucky’s economy, environment and communities,” said Laura Stephenson, vice president for land-grant engagement and dean of the Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment. “His vision for FNR aligns with our land-grant mission to advance discovery, educate the next generation of leaders and support communities throughout Kentucky.” With woodlands in each of the 120 counties and forest industries in 110 counties, Kentucky’s forests contribute approximately $20 billion to the Commonwealth’s economy annually. For Price, advancing the college’s commitment to supporting Kentucky’s woodlands starts with UK’s people within the FNR Department. 

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How light reflects on leaves may help researchers identify dying forests

By Erin Fennessy
University of Notre Dame
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Notre Dame, Indiana — Early detection of declining forest health is critical for the timely intervention and treatment of droughted and diseased flora, especially in areas prone to wildfires. Obtaining a reliable measure of whole-ecosystem health before it is too late, however, is an ongoing challenge for forest ecologists. Traditional sampling is too labor-intensive for whole-forest surveys, while modern genomics—though capable of pinpointing active genes—is still too expensive for large-scale application. Remote sensing offers a high-resolution solution from the skies, but currently limited paradigms for data analysis mean the images obtained do not say enough, early enough. A new study from researchers at the University of Notre Dame, published in Nature: Communications Earth & Environment, uncovers a more comprehensive picture of forest health. Funded by NASA, the research shows that spectral reflectance—a measurement obtained from satellite images—corresponds with the expression of specific genes.

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Forest carbon credits for state landowners

By Bonnie Coblentz
Mississippi State University
February 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

STARKVILLE, Miss. — Carbon dioxide is the most commonly produced greenhouse gas, the substances that trap heat in the atmosphere keeping the planet warm enough for life. Carbon is stored in high amounts in timber, of which Mississippi has an abundance. The state ranks in the top 10 nationally in timber production, with close to 20 million acres of timberland. The U.S. Geological Survey says that carbon sequestration is the process of capturing and storing atmospheric carbon dioxide. Removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere reduces the potential for global climate change. Since timber stores carbon efficiently, a tremendous amount of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide is stored in Mississippi’s forests. This makes timber a valuable resource in efforts to limit the amount of carbon available as a greenhouse gas. Carbon credits and the carbon offset market have made an impact on Mississippi’s economy to a degree for about 20 years.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Chestnut Carbon Becomes First U.S. IFM Project Verified for Biodiversity Conservation Impacts with Forest Stewardship Council

By Chestnut Carbon
PR Newswire
February 10, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

NEW YORK — Chestnut Carbon, a leading U.S. developer of nature-based carbon removal projects, today announced that its Improved Forest Management (IFM) project, called Family Forest Carbon Project, is the first IFM carbon removal project in North America to be verified under the Forest Stewardship Council Verified Impact program for Biodiversity Conservation – Maintenance of Natural Forest Structure. FSC’s Verified Impact program enhances carbon project credibility and market confidence by demonstrating that results are tied to independently validated ecological outcomes. In 2025, Chestnut’s separate afforestation project became the first project of any type in North America to receive Biodiversity Conservation Verified Impact. This new IFM milestone provides third‑party confirmation that Chestnut’s practices deliver measurable biodiversity benefits by conserving forestland across the country. Chestnut is maintaining critical ecosystem services at scale—an outcome that requires sustained management, investment, and on‑the‑ground stewardship. 

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Health & Safety

Study ties particle pollution from wildfire smoke to 24,100 US deaths per year

By Dorany Pineda
Oregon Public Broadcasting
February 5, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

Chronic exposure to pollution from wildfires has been linked to tens of thousands of deaths annually in the United States, according to a new study. The paper found that from 2006 to 2020, long-term exposure to tiny particulates from wildfire smoke contributed to an average of 24,100 deaths a year in the lower 48 states. “Our message is: Wildfire smoke is very dangerous. It is an increasing threat to human health,” said Yaguang Wei, a study author and assistant professor in the department of environmental medicine at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. …“It’s only if we’re doing multiple studies with many different designs that we gain scientific confidence of our outcomes,” said Michael Jerrett, professor of environmental health science at the University of California, Los Angeles. The paper’s researchers focused on deaths linked to chronic exposure to fine particulate matter, or PM2.5 — the main concern from wildfire smoke.

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Federal board investigates fatal chemical release at Baileyville, Maine pulp mill

News Center Maine
February 9, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

BAILEYVILLE, Maine — Federal investigators are looking into a chemical release at the Woodland Pulp mill in Baileyville that killed one worker and injured nine others. The US Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board said Monday it has opened an investigation into the January 27 incident at the facility. One of the injured workers remains hospitalized. The person who died was a 20-year-old University of Maine student taking part in an internship at the mill. According to the company, the release may have occurred when concentrated sulfuric acid mixed with sulfurous compounds within an enclosed sewer. The reaction can generate toxic hydrogen sulfide gas. The release occurred in the mill’s bleach plant area. Investigators will examine chemical handling practices, process safety systems, and the company’s emergency response. A team has already been sent to the site to collect evidence, conduct interviews, and review records. 

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Can mass timber reduce construction accidents in New York city?

By Slawomir Platta, The Platta Law Firm
Woodworking Network
February 4, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

Construction in New York City is one of the most dynamic and demanding industries in the country — but it’s also one of the most dangerous. …That’s why innovation in building materials and methods can have a real impact not only on efficiency and sustainability but also on safety. One such innovation, mass timber, is gaining traction. …Mass timber components are prefabricated in controlled factory settings. This approach greatly reduces the need for tasks like cutting, welding, or mixing concrete on-site — tasks that are commonly associated with jobsite injuries. …Additionally, since large panels arrive ready to install, crews spend less time working at height, which directly reduces the risk of falls — the leading cause of construction fatalities in the U.S., according to OSHA’s fall protection guidelines. …It also means a reduced need for powered hand tools and high-decibel equipment, lowering the risk of accidents related to hand injuries or communication breakdowns.

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