News Release - USDA Forest Service 2025

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The average US Forest Service hourly pay ranges from approximately $16 per hour (estimate) for a Crew Member to $60 per hour (estimate) for a Consulting Partner. US Forest Service employees rate the overall compensation and benefits package 3.7/5 stars.
A 2019 report by the Center for a Sustainable Economy found taxpayer losses of nearly $2 billion a year associated with the federal logging program carried out on National Forest and Bureau of Land Management lands.
Tom Schultz is Chief of the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, leading a workforce of approximately 33,000 employees that sustainably manages 193 million acres of national forests and grasslands, supports the worlds largest wildland fire and forestry research organizations, and works with tribes, states
Trump has cut 10 percent of workers at the Forest Service, an agency that manages 193 million acres of national forests and grasslands, with more firings and a steep reorganization likely coming. About 75 percent of agency staff are trained in wildland firefighting.
An estimated 2,300 employees of the U.S. Department of the Interiorincluding 1,000 National Park Service staff membersas well as 3,400 employees of the U.S. Forest Service were indiscriminately fired around February 14, 2025. Remaining civil servants fear they will be next, as more firings are expected.
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Congress has given the Forest Service authority to enter into land exchanges with private individuals and groups. Land exchanges can be effective tools because the Forest Service has very limited authority to sell lands and limited funds for acquiring key tracts.
Through stewardship contracts and agreements, the agency exchanges timber for services (e.g., habitat restoration) to help achieve its land management goals. Under GNA, the Forest Service enters into agreements with states to implement timber sales, called GNA agreements.
The Forest Service and taxpayers lose money through direct subsidies to the timber industry. The agency designs and builds hundreds of miles of roads per year, so that private timber companies can cut down the trees.

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