US Forest Service to move headquarters from Washington DC to Salt Lake City
Quick Insights
The Bottom Line
The Trump administration is relocating the U.S. Forest Service headquarters from Washington DC to Salt Lake City and closing regional offices.
How This Affects You
The relocation could affect how the Forest Service manages vast federal lands and policies that impact public access, conservation, and natural resource management across the country.
AI Summary
The Trump administration announced it will relocate the US Forest Service headquarters from Washington DC to Salt Lake City and close regional offices, a move the USDA framed as a "commonsense approach" to reorganization. The relocation, planned since last year, is drawing criticism from opponents who characterize it as an attack on science and scientists within the agency. The move echoes the first Trump administration's 2019 attempt to relocate the Bureau of Land Management to Colorado, which resulted in the loss of roughly 90% of its Washington-based staff before the agency returned to the capital under the Biden administration. The Forest Service manages vast federal land holdings and the headquarters shift could affect how the agency's scientific and policy work is conducted. The reorganization raises questions about staffing, operational efficiency, and the agency's capacity to serve its mission across the country.
What's Being Done
The USDA is implementing the relocation planned since last year; critics are challenging it as an attack on agency scientists.
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