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Wildfire protection weakens as federal job cuts push privatization
The U.S. Forest Service has lost thousands of employees in a mass layoff, raising concerns that wildfire response will shift to private contractors with fewer obligations to protect public lands.
Lois Parshley reports for The Lever.
In short:
- The White House’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) fired 3,400 Forest Service employees, leaving some without housing and reducing federal firefighting capacity.
- Private firefighting companies now account for nearly half of wildfire response, but experts warn they lack the long-term coordination and training of federal teams.
- The Trump administration has pushed for privatization, proposing federal land sales and budget cuts that could further weaken public land management.
Key quote:
“It’s not going to be easy to convert that over to a privatized arrangement. It would be really stupid. That doesn’t mean [Donald] Trump and [Elon] Musk aren’t going to do it.”
— Rod Dow, retired smokejumper
Why this matters:
As climate change fuels increasingly severe wildfires across the United States, federal budget cuts are making it harder to protect forests and communities. A growing reliance on private companies for wildfire prevention and suppression raises concerns, as these firms can walk away from contracts they deem unprofitable — potentially leaving fire-prone regions without critical protection. Some conservationists warn that weakened public control could lead to increased logging, development, or restricted access to areas traditionally used for recreation and cultural purposes.