Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Federal forest agency gets first Black leader

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — Veteran forester Randy Moore has been named chief of the U.S. Forest Service, the first Black person to lead the agency in its 116-year history.

Moore, 66, replaces Vicki Christians­en, who has led the agency since 2018. The Forest Service, a division of the Agricultur­e Department, oversees 193 million acres of public lands in 154 national forests and 20 national grasslands.

Moore has served as regional forester in the California-based Pacific Southwest Region since 2007, where he has responsibi­lity for 18 national forests in California

and Hawaii.

He will take over from Christians­en as head of the 30,000-employee agency upon her retirement

July 26. Christians­en and Moore will collaborat­e on what is already shaping up as a severe wildfire season in the West, where an epic drought, complicate­d by climate change, has made putting out fires more challengin­g and strained firefighti­ng resources throughout the region.

In the Pacific Northwest, where an extended heat wave has triggered record-breaking temperatur­es in Oregon and Washington state, fire crews have been positioned in high-risk areas, and cities and counties have imposed burn bans.

Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack, who appointed Moore, called him “a catalyst for change and creativity” in carrying out the Forest Service’s mission to sustain the nation’s forests.

As a regional forester, Moore has been on the forefront of climate change, most notably leading the region’s response to the dramatic increase in catastroph­ic wildfires in California over the past decade, Vilsack said. “His proven track record of supporting and developing employees and putting communitie­s at the center of the Forest Service’s work positions him well to lead the agency into the future at this critical time in our country,” Vilsack said in a statement.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, DCalif., praised Moore’s selection as Forest Service chief.

“California understand­s all too well the challenges facing our forests and I’m glad a California­n will head efforts to tackle them,” she said.

U.S. Rep. Bruce Westerman of Arkansas, the top Republican on the House Natural Resources Committee, called Moore “a seasoned profession­al,” adding: “I sincerely hope we can work together on mitigating catastroph­ic wildfires, opening up our national forests to sustainabl­e lumber harvesting, making forests more resilient against insects and diseases and much more.”

Before heading the Pacific Southwest region, Moore was regional forester in the Wisconsin-based Eastern Region, where he oversaw forests in 20 states.

Moore started his federal career in 1978 at USDA’s Natural Resources Conservati­on Service in North Dakota. He has worked at national forests in Colorado, North Carolina and Missouri, a national grassland in Kansas and as an administra­tor in Washington.

Moore’s appointmen­t was made as Congress and the Biden administra­tion push to increase firefighte­r pay and convert at least 1,000 seasonal wildland firefighte­rs to year-round workers as fires have grown more severe. President Joe Biden last week called for an increase in pay for federal firefighte­rs, who start as low as $13 an hour.

“That’s a ridiculous­ly low salary to pay federal firefighte­rs,” Biden said. “That’s going to end in my administra­tion.”

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