An advocacy group is gravely concerned about forced exits of hundreds of rangers, interpreters, and administrative staff in U.S. national parks.
Advocates say park workers are being pulled from important roles to help manage traffic and maintain basic infrastructure.
Warren Hill spent more than two decades working at the Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, which spans 4 million acres of coastline, forests, lakes and glaciers in Alaska. Last summer, he was ...
Calif. mountain towns are surrounded by public lands. They're already dealing with the fallout of cuts to the U.S. Forest ...
Created by Marisa Chearavanont, wife of CP Group's chairman, the Khao Yai Art Forest includes works by Louise Bourgeois and Richard Long In 1999, the late French artist Louise Bourgeois unleashed her ...
Western North Carolina is home to more than a million acres of national forest controlled by the Forest Service. In addition, ...
Thousands of federal government employees have been shown the door in the first month of President Donald Trump’s ...
New Mexico’s federal lawmakers are sounding the alarm, about the Trump Administration’s firing of thousands of U.S. Forest ...
A bipartisan poll of voters in eight Western states found that most Westerners approve of federal land management agencies.
Nurses and doctors at Ludeman Developmental Center in Park Forest protest over a new parking policy that as led to towed ...
Colorado lawmakers and communities are fighting back against President Donald Trump’s layoffs of at least 3,400 U.S. Forest ...
Ben Vizzachero was enjoying a Valentine’s Day outing when he learned he had been fired, despite just receiving a raise and a ...
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