Press Releases
Ranking Member Pingree Sounds Alarm Over Indiscriminate Firing of 3,400 Forest Service EmployeesThe reported termination comes at a time when wildfire risk continues to increase, exacerbated by the impacts of climate change
Washington,
February 15, 2025
Congresswoman Chellie Pingree (D-Maine), Ranking Member of the House Appropriations Interior and Environment Subcommittee, says the Trump Administration’s reported firing of 3,400 U.S. Forest Service (FS) employees will severely hinder the agency’s ability to fight wildfires. In a letter to newly confirmed Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, Pingree underscores that these firings come as the Forest Service was making record progress in fighting wildfires—reducing wildfire risk to $700 billion worth of housing and critical infrastructure, supporting a nearly 12 percent reduction in wildfire risk to watersheds that supply drinking water, and avoiding nearly $40 million in residential property losses in fiscal year 2023 alone. “The decision to fire thousands of FS employees will undoubtedly impact the agency’s ability to fight wildfires,” Pingree wrote. “While reports suggest that public safety employees were not part of the mass firing, positions that support forest management were included. You have expressed a commitment to forest management, wildfire mitigation, and supporting forest markets. However, firing 3,400 FS employees is in direct conflict with these supposed values.” “Terminating these employees will have a chilling effect on the agency’s remaining workforce, creating an environment of fear, and undermining the agency’s ability to meet its mission,” she said. The full letter is available here and copied below. +++ Dear Secretary Rollins, I write to express my extreme dismay and concern at reports of the United States Forest Service (FS) terminating 3,400 employees. This reduction in the FS workforce will significantly hinder the agency’s ability to carry out its mission to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the nation’s forests and grasslands to meet the needs of both present and future generations. As you may know, prior to the indiscriminate firing of FS employees, the agency was making record progress in fighting wildfires. According to January 2025 Wildfire Crisis Strategy Update, the agency reduced wildfire risk to $700 billion worth of housing and critical infrastructure, supported a nearly 12 percent reduction in wildfire risk to watersheds that supply drinking water, and avoided nearly $40 million in residential property losses in fiscal year 2023 alone. This comes at a time when wildfire risk continues to increase, exacerbated by the impacts of climate change. There are 70,000 communities in the United States vulnerable to wildfire and one in three homes in the United States is in the Wildland-Urban Interface. The decision to fire thousands of FS employees will undoubtedly impact the agency’s ability to fight wildfires. The western United States alone saw a 246 percent increase in structures lost to wildfire in the last decade. While reports suggest that public safety employees were not part of the mass firing, positions that support forest management were included. You have expressed a commitment to forest management, wildfire mitigation, and supporting forest markets. However, firing 3,400 FS employees is in direct conflict with these supposed values. Terminating these employees will have a chilling effect on the agency’s remaining workforce, creating an environment of fear, and undermining the agency’s ability to meet its mission. As the Ranking Member and former Chair of the subcommittee responsible for funding the Forest Service, I have a deep understanding of the resources necessary to support the agency’s work. Employees are the Forest Service’s most critical resource; without them, it is impossible to ensure our nation’s forests remain healthy and properly managed. Sincerely, ### |