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Vol. I Β· No. 167 Β· 808 Reports Wednesday, June 17, 2026
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Neguse Criticizes Proposed Cuts to USFS State, Private, Tribal Forestry Programs

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Topics in This Edition

US Forest Servicewildfire preventionfederal budgetpublic lands management

Summary

The segment shows Rep. Joe Neguse (D-CO) questioning USFS Chief during a House hearing on hazardous fuels reduction comparisons between 2024 and 2025, pine beetle task force collaboration in Colorado, proposed elimination of the State, Private, and Tribal Forestry program, and potential management shifts at Maroon Bells Scenic Area. The chief acknowledges the fuels drop, commits to state partnerships, notes House budget mark would maintain ~91% funding, and describes ongoing site management collaborations with states, tribes, and others. The second paragraph covers sourcing via direct hearing testimony and graphics-free format with no additional experts or data visuals shown.

Editorial Assessment

Claims align closely with contemporaneous reporting and USFS budget justifications on the fuels treatment decline and program elimination proposal. Viewer may miss that fuels reductions have faced chronic shortfalls predating 2025 and that House marks remain subject to final appropriations. Maroon Bells discussion accurately captures 2026 partnership talks driven by operational deficits. Framing emphasizes Democratic concerns over administration priorities without counterbalancing data on state-level capacity or long-term fiscal rationale. Overall solid primary-source presentation but lacks external verification or context on program performance metrics.

Key Moments

verified

USFS treated fewer hazardous fuel acres in 2025 (first Trump year) than 2024 (last Biden year)

Multiple analyses of USFS data show ~2.6 million acres in 2025 vs. ~4.1 million in 2024, a ~35% drop.

verified

OMB/FY2026 budget proposes eliminating State, Private, and Tribal Forestry program

USFS FY2026 budget justification explicitly eliminates discretionary funding for the account to shift responsibilities.

missing context

House mark funds state/private/tribal programs at ~91% of FY2026 levels for FY2027

Chief's statement during hearing; final enacted levels not confirmed in available budget documents as of mid-2026.

verified

USFS exploring offload or partnership for Maroon Bells management due to deferred maintenance

May 2026 Pitkin County-USFS discussions confirm special use permit for county operations starting 2027 amid funding/staffing gaps.

Sources Consulted

  1. Neguse Joins Bennet, Colorado Delegation in Demanding Information on U.S. Forest Service Staffing
  2. New analysis finds U.S. Forest Service treated 35% fewer acres for wildfire risk in 2025
  3. President Trump's FY2026 Forest Service Budget Request
  4. fs-fy26-congressional-budget-justification
  5. Trump budget cuts funding for state and Tribal forestry program
  6. Pitkin County and U.S. Forest Service Explore Expanded Partnership for Management of Maroon Bells Scenic Area
  7. Pitkin County could step in to save Maroon Bells from 'red zone'
  8. Amid restructuring talk, Forest Service says it can no longer manage popular Maroon Bells recreation area
  9. Neguse, Huffman Press U.S. Forest Service for Answers on Staffing Levels Ahead of Summer Season
  10. House Committee Appropriators Take Their Own Path re FS R&D and State and Private
  11. Funding for key USFS programs – reprieve in House
  12. State, Private, and Tribal Forestry Appropriations