Climate politics, staff cuts ensnarl post-Helene forest cleanup

By Marc Heller | 05/22/2025 01:41 PM EDT

President Donald Trump’s workforce reductions and push to undermine climate change and extreme weather protections pose new challenges for the Pisgah National Forest recovery.

Will Harlan of the Center for Biological Diversity views a former forest road transformed into a stream by Hurricane Helene's landslides in the Pisgah National Forest in western North Carolina.

Will Harlan of the Center for Biological Diversity, who lives nearby, views a former forest road transformed into a stream by Hurricane Helene's landslides in the Pisgah National Forest in western North Carolina. Marc Heller/POLITICO's E&E News

BARNARDSVILLE, North Carolina — Hurricane Helene felled thousands of acres of trees in North Carolina’s Pisgah National Forest last September, but it spared a hefty American beech standing near the entrance to Big Ivy, an area so cherished for its old-growth stands that the federal government considered it a national park candidate in the 1930s.

The tree, however, had a closer call this spring with Forest Service chain saws.

A favorite of Will Harlan, Southeast director for the Center for Biological Diversity, the tree grows aside a muddy dirt road the Forest Service recently carved into the woods at Big Ivy as part of the post-Helene recovery effort.

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