Forest chief bows to Congress on state and local grants

By Marc Heller | 05/14/2026 06:31 AM EDT

Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz vowed to let grants flow to states and localities if Congress rejects his agency’s request to slash them next year.

Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz testifies at a Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing.

Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz testifies Wednesday at a Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing on his agency's fiscal 2027 budget. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz promised Wednesday to defer to congressional appropriators if they refuse the Trump administration’s proposed cuts to state and local forestry grants.

At a Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing, Schultz committed to spending the money Congress appropriates to state, private and tribal forestry programs — a routine process that’s become politically fraught in this administration.

What would typically be an easy matter — disbursing funds as directed by Congress — has become a point of contention since the Forest Service last year diverted as much as $43 million from state and local grants to cover upfront costs of the agency’s broad staff reductions.

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Congress brushed off a similar cut the administration proposed for the current fiscal year, and lawmakers haven’t shown much appetite to slash funding to their states in fiscal 2027 either. Congress devoted $310 million to state, private and tribal forestry programs this year.

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