This summer, millions of Americans are hiking, camping, fishing and making lifelong memories in our national parks, forests and other public lands. But something troubling is taking place behind the beautiful views: The federal agencies that safeguard these places for us are being hollowed out.
Staffing and budget cuts at the Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and U.S. Forest Service aren’t just numbers on a spreadsheet. They are empty ranger stations during peak season, trail crews that never arrive and wildfire teams stretched so thin they can’t keep up.
During the four years when I led the BLM, from 2021 to 2025, I saw what it takes to care for hundreds of millions of acres of public lands. It takes committed, dedicated people—wildfire crews, wildlife biologists, planners, law enforcement rangers—and it takes funding. Today, both are being stripped away at historic rates.
We can already see the consequences. As I write, flames tear through the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, burning down the historic lodge and scarring over 100,000 acres. The fire has raged for weeks since a lightning strike started it on July 4, and it may continue for weeks more.
Fire is part of the West’s natural cycle, but climate change and decades of suppression have made today’s fires hotter and more destructive. It just doesn’t make sense that the Trump administration is gutting the agencies responsible for managing fire risk when we need these experienced and dedicated people most.
More than 1,600 wildfire-qualified staff have been driven out of the Forest Service in recent months, and as many as one in four firefighting jobs remain vacant. To make it worse, firefighters are being pulled from the fire lines to tend to logistics for some forests, even in one of the most dangerous wildfire seasons in memory.
The administration has even proposed removing firefighting from the Forest Service entirely, a dangerous move that separates the rangers who know the land best from those dousing the flames.
People of all backgrounds celebrated when we collectively stopped Congress from selling off our public lands earlier this summer. But now, a clear and dangerous pattern is emerging: Shrink these agencies until they break, then claim that selling off or industrializing our public lands is the only fix.
This should alarm anyone who values the freedom these lands provide. Public lands are a great equalizer—places where all Americans have the same right to hike, hunt, fish or camp. And to unplug and touch nature. If we lose the people who manage these lands, our access will shrink under wildfire closures, roads will be gated and campgrounds will close. We’ll lose our freedom to wander.
It’s also a direct threat to conservation. Our public lands deliver clean water, clean air and wildlife habitat. Cutting conservation programs and abandoning fire-smart management will leave forests overgrown and ready to burn—with wildfires too big and too hot.
Worse still, future generations are going to inherit the choices made today. When the administration guts our parks and public lands to pay for tax cuts for billionaires, they saddle the future with parks and trails that are closed, crumbling roads and buildings, forests prone to even worse fire, smoky skies and “No Trespassing” signs. The cherished traditions we pass down—teaching a child to fish or hunt, camping under a night sky, chasing butterflies—will no longer be available to all.
Westerners know what’s at stake. Poll after poll shows that people across the political spectrum want to keep our public lands public, healthy and accessible. That consensus is powerful, but only if we use it now. Either we protect the agencies that protect our public lands, or we watch the slow-motion sell-off unfold.
We must demand full staffing and funding for the agencies that manage our lands, and we must all stand together—hunters and hikers, ranchers and rafters, anglers and climbers—in defense of the places that belong to us all, and to future generations.
Tracy Stone-Manning is a contributor to Writers on the Range, writersontherange.org, an independent nonprofit dedicated to spurring lively conversation about the West. She is president of The Wilderness Society and a former director of the BLM. Like millions of Americans, she is spending her summer vacation on public lands.
This column was published in the following newspapers:
08/20/2025 | Vail Daily | Vail | CO |
08/22/2025 | Salt Lake Tribune | Salt Lake City | UT |
08/22/2025 | Denver Post | Denver | CO |
08/23/2025 | Boulder Daily Camera | Boulder | CO |
08/24/2025 | Grand Junction Daily Sentinel | Grand Junction | CO |
08/19/2025 | Aspen Daily News | Aspen | CO |
08/19/2025 | Montrose Daily Press | Montrose | CO |
08/19/2025 | The Mountain Mail | Pagosa Springs | CO |
08/19/2025 | South Fork Tines | South Fork | CO |
08/22/2025 | KVNF Radio | Paonia | CO |
08/21/2025 | Idaho Mountain Express | Ketchum | ID |
08/22/2025 | Idaho County Free Press | Grangeville | ID |
08/22/2025 | Moab Times Independent | Moab | UT |
08/27/2025 | Explore Big Sky | Big Sky | MT |
08/28/2025 | Daily Interlake | Kalispell | MT |
08/28/2025 | Woodburn Independent | Woodburn | OR |
08/28/2025 | Valley Times News | Portland | OR |
08/28/2025 | The Newberg Graphic | Newberg | OR |
09/03/2025 | Herald Pioneer | Canby | Or |
08/22/2025 | Columbia County Spotlight | Scappose | OR |
08/28/2025 | Beaverton Valley Times | Beaverton | OR |
08/28/2025 | Forest Grove News Times | Forest Grove | OR |
08/28/2025 | Wyofile | WY | |
08/28/2025 | Tahoe Daily Tribune | South Lake Tahoe | CA |
08/27/2025 | Las Vegas Sun | Las Vegas | NV |
08/21/2025 | Methow Valley News | Twisp | WA |
08/22/2025 | Three Forks Voice | Three Forks | MT |
08/28/2025 | Greeley Tribune | Greeley | CO |
08/28/2025 | Green RIver Star | Green River | WY |
08/23/2025 | Center Post Dispatch | Center | CO |
08/23/2025 | Monte Vista Journal | Monte Vista | CO |
08/23/2025 | Alamosa Valley Courier | Alamosa | CO |
08/23/2025 | Del Norte Prospector | Del Norte | CO |
08/28/2025 | Whitehall Ledger | Whitehall | MT |
08/28/2025 | Las Cruces Sun News | Las Cruces | NM |
08/23/2025 | Durango Telegraph | Durango | CO |
08/29/2025 | Logan Herald Journal | Logan | UT |
08/25/2025 | Taos News | Taos | NM |
08/21/2025 | Wyoming Tribune Eagle | Cheyenne | WY |
08/22/2025 | Laramie Boomerang | Laramie | WY |
08/28/2025 | USA Today | Mclean | VA |
08/28/2025 | MSN.COM | Seattle | WA |
08/27/2025 | Mineral County Miner | Monte Vista | CO |
08/28/2025 | Hillsboro Times News | Hillsboros | OR |
08/26/2025 | Limon Leader | Limon | CO |
08/20/2025 | San Luis Valley Journal | Alamosa | Co |
08/23/2025 | Conejos County Citizen | Monte Vista | CO |
You are right on the mark! The president is only interested in parks & forests as “Real Estate” to be used or sold. I don’t think he has ever set foot in a National Park to hike. The USA needs to preserve and protect federal lands for public use not to sell for profit
So you despise Donald Trump. I get it. I don’t like him much either. But there’s no reason to rant and rave and lie. Trump has not proposed changing the status of the national parks, nor has he proposed selling them. Tell the truth. Don’t make things up because you are still mad about last year’s election, Judith.
Stone-Manning is right about staffing cuts, but wrong to push the tired myth of “overgrown forests.” Protecting communities and firefighters means working from the community-out—home hardening, defensible space, fair pay—not trying to “manage” fire-adapted ecosystems with logging, which only makes fires burn hotter and faster. Too bad the head of the Wilderness Society is repeating industry talking points—maybe it’s time she found another line of work.
What does your notion of “fair pay” have to do with any of this?
It would be good to put together a business case that our National Parks are a huge tourism draw, bringing in significant money from overseas. This would include direct money for Park fees, as well as money for the local communities. A proper business case could lead to more funding based on the ROI.