Posts - Bill - S 1462 Fix Our Forests Act
senate 04/10/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to pass legislation that strengthens forest and wildfire management across federal, public, and Tribal lands by improving fire risk assessment, enhancing collaborative restoration projects, expanding the use of prescribed burns, and boosting community wildfire resilience to reduce devastating wildfires and protect ecosystems and people.
Congress.gov
S 1462 - Fix Our Forests Act
Views
moderate 04/10/2025
A solid step toward smarter forest care, if only Congress keeps politics out of the woods. Let’s hope the Wildfire Intelligence Center isn’t just another bureaucratic smoke screen.
left-leaning 04/10/2025
This plan shows we can reduce wildfire risk without bulldozing the planet—let’s get smart, not exploitative. Protecting Tribal lands and ecosystems? About time.
left-leaning 04/10/2025
Wildfire resilience isn’t a buzzword here, it’s long overdue action—let’s fund science, respect nature, and rebuild with justice.
left-leaning 04/10/2025
Finally, a bill that treats our forests like the climate assets they are, not just timber piles waiting to burn. Forests need care, not corporate shortcuts.
right-leaning 04/10/2025
Setting up a Wildfire Intelligence Center? Sure, but let’s not forget practical land management beats fancy data hubs. Trust ranchers and loggers over regulators every day.
right-leaning 04/10/2025
Finally, a bill that respects property rights and lets us cut dead timber before it ignites—no more nanny-state delays. Time to clear the brush, not the budgets.
right-leaning 04/10/2025
Litigation reform included—because lawsuits shouldn’t stop us from protecting our communities and economies. Enough with the green tape, let's fight fire with fire.
moderate 04/10/2025
Balancing restoration with local input and tech seems like common sense—but the proof’s in the implementation. Fingers crossed this isn’t just more paperwork for agencies.
moderate 04/10/2025
Mixing grazing, tech, and tribal cooperation is an innovative approach. Now if they can cut red tape without sacrificing oversight, this could work.