Changes in Relationships between the USDA Forest Service and Small, Forest-Based Communities in the Northwest Forest Plan Area amid Declines in Agency Staffing

Author:

Santo Anna R12ORCID,Coughlan Michael R1ORCID,Huber-Stearns Heidi1,Adams Mark D O3,Kohler Gabriel14

Affiliation:

1. Institute for a Sustainable Environment, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA

2. Institute for Resources, Environment, and Sustainability, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada

3. USDA-Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, Portland, OR, USA

4. The Forest Stewards Guild, Santa Fe, NM, USA

Abstract

Abstract This article explores the changing relationships between the USDA Forest Service and 10 small, forest-based communities in the Northwest Forest Plan area in Washington, Oregon, and California. Interviews with 158 community members and agency personnel indicated that community member interviewees were largely dissatisfied with the agency’s current level of community engagement. Interviewees believed that loss of staff was the primary factor contributing to declining engagement, along with increasing turnover and long-distance commuting. Interviewees offered explanations for increasing employee turnover and commuting, including lack of housing, lack of employment for spouses, lack of services for children, social isolation, improving road conditions making long-distance commuting easier, agency incentives and culture, decreasing social cohesion among agency staff, unpaid overtime responsibilities, and agency hiring practices. Community member perceptions regarding long-term changes in community well-being and agency-community relationships were more negative than agency staff’s perceptions.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Forestry

Reference21 articles.

1. Professionals’ perspectives: Exploring the occupational and organizational psychology of community–agency interactions in forest fire management;Asah;Forests,2014

2. Making forest planning great again? Early implementation of the Forest Service’s 2012 national forest planning rule;Brown;Nat. Res. Environ.,2019

3. Forest management policy and community well-being in the Pacific Northwest;Charnley;J. For.,2008

4. Northwest Forest Plan—the first 10 years (1994–2003): socioeconomic monitoring results.

5. Ten Nonmetropolitan, Forest-based Communities in the Northwest Forest Plan area, a comparative case study approach.;Coughlan

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