Santa Fe New Mexican

Interim forest chief says work safety is priority

Agency appointee replaces leader who left abruptly this week amid allegation­s of sexual misconduct

- By Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, Mont. — The U.S. Forest Service faces “hard truths” about harassment and retaliatio­n in its ranks following the departure of its chief amid allegation­s of sexual misconduct, the agency’s newly appointed leader said Friday.

Forest Service interim Chief Vicki Christians­en said in an email to agency employees that she stands with them and will take steps to provide a safe workplace.

She was appointed to the post Thursday to replace Tony Tooke, who abruptly retired this week amid revelation­s he was under investigat­ion and accused of relationsh­ips with subordinat­es.

Lawmakers in Congress and other observers said Tooke’s troubles reflect broader cultural problems within the male-dominated Forest Service. The issue dates back to at least the 1970s, when a class-action lawsuit alleged discrimina­tion against women when it came to hiring and promotions in the agency.

Christians­en has spent her career as a wildland firefighte­r and joined the Forest Service in 2010. She’d worked for 30 years at the state level in Arizona and Washington.

“We’ve had to face some hard truths about allegation­s of harassment and retaliatio­n in our agency, even as we stare down some of the biggest landmanage­ment challenges in our nation’s history,” she wrote in Friday’s email. “I know we are up to the task.

Just over a third of the Forest Service’s permanent employees are women, a figure that drops during the summer with additional seasonal hires, according to agency statistics.

In announcing Christians­en’s appointmen­t, Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue tasked her with two goals: improving the agency’s response to sexual misconduct while effectivel­y managing more than 300,000 square miles of forests and grasslands in 43 states and Puerto Rico.

The leadership shake-up renewed calls from Congress for the Forest Service to more aggressive­ly address complaints of sexual harassment, bullying and rape. Its problems mirror recent misconduct scandals within the nation’s other major public lands agency, the Interior Department.

Abby Bolt, a Forest Service employee in California with a pending sexual discrimina­tion complaint against her male supervisor­s, told The Associated Press that rumors of Tooke’s relationsh­ips started circulatin­g within the agency as soon as he was appointed.

Bolt, a fire battalion chief now on leave, said she was hopeful Christians­en would bring some “fresh eyes” to the Forest Service’s problems.

Almost half of Forest Service employees interviewe­d as part of a recent sexual harassment audit expressed distrust in the process of reporting complaints, according to a report from the Agricultur­e Department’s inspector general.

Perdue said more steps already were being taken to protect victims from retaliatio­n. Those include using outside investigat­ors for at least the next year to investigat­e sexual misconduct allegation­s, according to the agency’s response to the inspector general’s audit.

Perdue’s office has not responded to repeated questions about whether the investigat­ion into Tooke would continue.

 ??  ?? Vicki Christians­en
Vicki Christians­en

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States