Gov. Evers Sends Letter to Trump Administration Urging Immediate Action to Prevent Funding and Staff Cuts Impacting Wisconsin’s Forests, Forestry Industry
MADISON — Gov. Tony Evers sent a letter to the Trump Administration urging immediate action to prevent funding and staff cuts that will impact Wisconsin’s forests and the state’s critical forestry industry. Wisconsin ranks first in the nation in paper production and exports over $850 million in paper products annually. Overall, Wisconsin’s forestry products industry contributes $42 billion to the state’s economy and 126,000 jobs, which could experience significant consequences and impacts caused by reckless cuts to federal investments and mass firings of federal workers. In a letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Brooke L. Rollins, Gov. Evers urged the Trump Administration to recognize the importance of Wisconsin’s forests as valuable resources that are crucial to ensuring Wisconsin’s current and future economic success.
The governor’s letter comes as, earlier this month, the Wisconsin Council on Forestry sent a letter to Wisconsin elected officials, including lawmakers on the state Senate Committee on Insurance, Housing, Rural Issues and Forestry and Assembly Committee on Forestry, Parks and Outdoor Recreation, expressing concerns regarding threats to federal funding and staffing and emphasizing the importance of the state’s forests to the state’s way of life, economy, and future.
A copy of the governor’s letter to USDA Secretary Rollins is available here, and a transcript of the letter is available below.
Dear Secretary Rollins:
Wisconsin’s forests play a crucial role in our state’s environmental, social, and economic success, and I am deeply concerned about the potential for funding cuts and mass staff firings by the Trump Administration that will impact Wisconsin’s forests and our state’s critical forestry industry. I have heard these same concerns from experts and professionals in our state’s forestry industry, including the Wisconsin Council on Forestry, with a diverse membership representing forest products, conservation, workforce, paper and pulp, and private landowners. All Wisconsinites can agree that our forests, from the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest to the millions of acres of private forestland, are valuable resources, and we all must continue our work to protect and foster this resource.
About 60 percent of the nearly 17 million acres of forestland in Wisconsin is private forestland, which makes potential cuts to programs that support private woodland owners, such as the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), particularly alarming. Cuts to EQIP will reduce the number and availability of tools to assist Wisconsinites in protecting the health of their forestland from threats like invasive species and erosion. Additionally, Wisconsin ranks first in the nation in paper production and exports over $850 million in paper products annually. Long term, sustainable forest health is crucial to supporting this major industry. Cuts to other wood products research and development, including staffing and funding cuts to the Forest Products Laboratory, will also disproportionately impact Wisconsin and harm the innovative work currently being done in Wisconsin to develop new markets and opportunities for forest products while also protecting the health and sustainability of our forestlands.
We must work together to ensure Wisconsin’s forests and forestry industry remain healthy and thriving. I have stepped up in this work, and I ask that you do the same and reverse and prevent any funding and staffing cuts that will threaten Wisconsin’s forests and critical forestry industry.
Respectfully,
Tony Evers
Governor
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.