Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
return
return to main site

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections

Personal tools

You are here: Home / News & Announcements / WLFW Newsletters / National Association of State Foresters Weekly Newsletter / National Association of State Foresters Weekly Newsletter Feb 18, 2022

National Association of State Foresters Weekly Newsletter Feb 18, 2022

The Southeast enters wildfire season early...

Original Source

In Your State

Washington introduces “Watershed Resilience Action Plan” for salmon recovery in the Snohomish River Watershed [Washington DNR]

(Press release) DNR lays out a ‘Tree to Sea’ effort for recovering salmon habitat in the Snohomish River and a roadmap to improve and restore every watershed in our state

More from Washington:

(Press release) New report outlines significant economic opportunities generated by DNR salmon recovery and forest health restoration [Washington DNR]

DNR land near Green Mountain could generate funds for school construction [Kitsap Sun]

(Press release) WSU Extension, DNR to offer free online forest owners’ winter school classes [Washington DNR]

Meet the woman preserving the history of Oregon’s Black loggers [Atlas Obscura]

Maxville had been a thriving community of a few hundred people. It was owned by Bowman-Hicks, a Missouri company that, like other lumber companies in the area, recruited skilled loggers from the South, regardless of race.

More from Oregon:

ODF issues $20 million for wildfire mitigation projects on forest and rangelands [KDRV]

ODF awards $5 million in grants to landowners for wildfire resiliency [KDRV]

Oregon fire season longest ever, challenges remain [Lake County Examiner]

Malheur National Forest to award another long-term stewardship deal plus other contracts [Blue Mountain Eagle]

$262 million headed to Oregon's National Forests [KTVL]

Weyerhaeuser adds 89,000 acres to free access program in Oregon [Market Screener]

Following restoration, Collier Park plans a summer reopening [Herald and News]

In bringing back wild lynx, Confederated Colville tribes hope to right historical wrongs and restore balance to wildlife on the landscape [Inlander]

Read more...