The U.S. Forest Service has surpassed its wildland firefighter hiring goals for the current fire season, deploying approximately 11,550 seasonal staff members who are either completing training or ready for deployment. The agency reports this figure exceeds initial targets by roughly 200 firefighters and represents a 6% increase compared to staffing levels at this point in recent years.
U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz attributes the successful recruitment to recent pay raises implemented for wildland firefighters. The hiring milestone arrives as Western states confront historically dry conditions, with fast-moving wildfires erupting in populated areas including Spokane, Washington, within the past day.
"I think the conditions we have are alarming," Schultz told NPR. "But the Forest Service will be prepared for this season."
Despite the positive hiring numbers, concerns persist among Western state officials and former agency personnel regarding the Forest Service's capacity to respond effectively to major wildfire events. The agency has experienced substantial downsizing since President Trump returned to the White House, losing approximately 6,000 permanent staff members through layoffs, buyouts, and early retirements.
The U.S. Forest Service is currently undergoing a comprehensive reorganization that includes relocating its headquarters to Utah and closing or consolidating dozens of research facilities and regional offices. The Trump administration maintains this restructuring will position the agency closer to the forests under its management.
Dave Upthegrove, Washington state's elected public lands commissioner, expressed apprehension about the federal workforce reduction. "These layoffs at the federal level are presenting risk as to our ability to respond to major wildfires," Upthegrove said.
Upthegrove specifically highlighted concerns about potential shortages of elite incident command teams that states depend upon during significant fire events. The recent departure of permanent staff members, including rangers and timber technicians, has eliminated an undetermined number of personnel who held red cards—credentials that qualify them to deploy from their regular positions to wildfire incidents.
"If we have a bad year for fire throughout the United States it could mean a shortage of these federal teams," Upthegrove said. "We are preparing contingency plans."
The divergence between robust seasonal hiring numbers and the reduction in permanent staff presents a complex picture of federal wildfire response capability. While seasonal firefighters provide essential frontline resources, the loss of experienced permanent personnel with specialized training and incident management expertise may create gaps in coordinated response efforts during severe fire seasons.









