Keep Wildfire Research Stations Open Before Homes Are Destroyed
Final signature count: 197
197 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Rainforest Site
Closing Forest Service wildfire research stations now could leave forests and communities with fewer tools to face growing fire danger.
The United States Forest Service plans to close research stations that study wildfire risk, drought, forest health, and climate impacts even as communities across the country face worsening fire threats1. These stations do not just house staff. They support field science that helps experts understand how forests burn, recover, and change over time.
Public Safety Depends On Strong Fire Science
According to reporting on the planned reorganization, the closures would come during an already intense wildfire year2. By late March, more than 1.6 million acres had already burned across the United States, far above the recent average for that point in the season3. When research stations close, the public risks losing practical knowledge that helps guide prevention, land management, and emergency planning.
These Stations Help Protect Forests And Communities
Forest Service researchers study the conditions that make fires more severe and the strategies that may reduce future damage1. Their work informs decisions that affect wildlife habitat, water resources, public lands, and nearby homes. Closing stations in the middle of growing climate and wildfire pressure could disrupt ongoing studies and push experienced scientists out of public service2.
The Forest Service Must Protect Knowledge Not Cut It
Wildfire policy should rest on strong evidence and steady public investment. The Forest Service should keep these research stations open, staffed, and able to continue their work without interruption. Forests and communities need more preparation, not less.
Sign the petition and urge the Forest Service to keep wildfire research stations open before more science is lost and more communities face preventable harm.
