How the U.S. Forest Service Supports Military and Community Compatible Use

The U.S. Forest Service's (USFS) mission is to "...sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the nation's forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations."The USFS motto - “Caring for the Land and Serving People” - reflects this mission and accomplishes it through five main areas:

  • Protection and management of natural resources on USFS managed lands
  • Research on all aspects of forestry, rangeland management, and forest resource utilization
  • Assistance and cooperation with state and local governments, forest industries, and private landowners to help protect and manage non-federal forests and associated range and watershed lands that improve rural areas
  • Achieving and supporting an effective workforce that reflects the nation's diversity
  • Providing international assistance to formulate policies and coordinate U.S. support for protecting and managing the world's forest resources

The USFS sponsors many programs that facilitate military and community compatibility. For example, the three programs featured in this section can help fund buffer areas around military installations, while partnerships implementing Compatible Use Study recommendations can utilize the roster of USFS donors and investors to secure additional funding. The USFS' relationship with tribal governments can also leverage innovative solutions to compatibility problems.

Compatibility Factors relevant to the United States Forest Service: Land Use, Air Quality, Land/Air/Sea Spaces

Relevant Programs and Plans

Secure Rural Schools Program

 

The Secure Rural Schools program funds schools, roads, and municipal services in more than 700 counties across the U.S. and Puerto Rico. Congress ratified the program in 1908 for rural counties whose tax base was limited by growing federal lands. A portion of the USFS funds generated through activities, such as grazing, timber production, and special use permits on national forest properties, are distributed to counties to help maintain this infrastructure. In FY00, Congress passed the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self Determination Act to help stabilize program funds and established three distinct program categories: Title I (roads and schools); Title II (projects on federal lands); and Title III (county projects).


Conservation Finance Program

 

The Conservation Finance Program (CF) Program allows the Forest Service to leverage capital investments for priority projects that may not be sufficiently funded through annual appropriations. The program's finance partners include individuals, foundations, fund managers, conservation oriented non-governmental organizations (NGOs), researchers, and state and federal agencies who help secure needed investments. Through such actions, partners help the agency solve its biggest challenges, including forest restoration to mitigate wildfire risk and deferred maintenance of recreation infrastructure. The program has four main areas: 1) public funding, private/philanthropic donations; 2) consumer-based fees and charges; 3) return-driven investments such as bonds, mitigation, and carbon banking; and 4) in-kind funding that offsets the value of ecosystem services provided by the USFS. You can learn more about conservation finance programs in the USFS Conservation Finance Toolkit.


Shared Stewardship

 

The Shared Stewardship program collaborates with tribal governments, states, and NGO partners to address challenges resulting from wildfires, drought, and invasive species. The program recognizes that these challenges can transcend national forest and tribal lands, and jurisdictional boundaries. It also acknowledges that any single government agency cannot sufficiently respond to such threats. Therefore, the USFS has renewed its partnership efforts with states, tribes, and others to jointly establish priorities that address cross jurisdictional challenges. Such efforts can explore ways to improve forest health and resiliency across management areas. This collaborative approach to land management builds on a long history of partnerships to manage the nation's forests and grasslands.

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1 Meet the Forest Service. Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture. ​

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