‘Fix Our Forests’ bill gets Senate momentum

By Marc Heller | 10/22/2025 06:31 AM EDT

The measure would ease reviews and make legal challenges harder for thinning and logging projects in fire-prone areas of national forests.

John Curtis at the Capitol.

Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah) is lead sponsor of the "Fix Our Forests Act." Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

A Senate committee easily passed legislation Tuesday to reduce legal and environmental checks on forest thinning and logging aimed at reducing wildfire risks.

The 18-5 vote in the Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee was the latest indication that the “Fix Our Forests Act,” S. 1462, from Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah), appears to have momentum after similar bills have languished in Congress.

Five Democrats — Sens. Adam Schiff of California, Cory Booker of New Jersey, Dick Durbin of Illinois and Michael Bennet of Colorado — were the sole votes against the bill, a slightly altered version of a measure that’s already passed the House with more than 60 Democratic votes.

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The Senate committee’s ranking Democrat, Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, voted for the measure but said it needs improvement — including a way to pay for new programs — as House and Senate leaders try to advance it.

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