Bills/H.R. 179

Proven Forest Management Act of 2025

Proven Forest Management Act of 2025

In CommitteeEnvironmentHouseHouse Bill · 119th Congress
Bill Progress · House
Introduced
Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Passed Both
Signed

Plain Language Summary

# Proven Forest Management Act of 2025 - Summary **What the bill would do:** The Proven Forest Management Act would speed up forest management projects on federally-owned National Forests by reducing environmental review requirements. Specifically, it would allow fuel-reduction projects (like controlled burns and tree thinning) of up to 10,000 acres to skip certain lengthy environmental reviews required by federal law, as long as they're developed collaboratively and follow the forest's management plan. The bill also directs the Forest Service to pursue multiple environmental benefits from these projects when doing so isn't too costly. **Who it affects:** This bill primarily affects the U.S. Forest Service, which manages National Forests, as well as environmental groups, timber companies, and local communities near federal forests.

Supporters argue it will help reduce catastrophic wildfires by allowing faster forest management. Environmental groups may have concerns about reduced oversight of large-scale projects. **Current status:** The bill (HR 179) was introduced in the 119th Congress by Republican Rep. Tom McClintock of California and is currently in committee, meaning it hasn't yet been debated or voted on by the full House.

CRS Official Summary

Proven Forest Management Act of 2025This bill sets forth provisions to expedite the approval and implementation of forest management activities and establishes related requirements.First, the bill categorically excludes a forest management activity conducted on National Forest System land for reducing forest fuels from certain environmental review requirements under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 if the activity (1) does not exceed 10,000 acres (including not more than 3,000 acres of mechanical thinning), (2) is developed in a collaborative manner, and (3) is consistent with the forest plan developed for the relevant National Forest System land. Next, the bill directs the Forest Service to conduct forest management activities in a manner that attains multiple ecosystem benefits unless the costs associated with attaining such benefits are excessive.Additionally, the Forest Service must (1) establish any post-program ground condition criteria for a ground disturbance caused by a forest management activity required by the applicable forest plan, and (2) provide for monitoring to ascertain the attainment of relevant post-program conditions.The bill also allows the Forest Service or the Department of the Interior, as appropriate, to enter into contracts and cooperative agreements with certain entities to provide for fuel reduction, erosion control, reforestation, and similar activities on federal and nonfederal lands within land adjustment programs.Finally, the bill directs the Forest Service, when conducting a forest management activity on National Forest System land, to coordinate with impacted parties to increase efficiency and maximize the compatibility of management practices across such land.

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Latest Action

January 8, 2026

Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Natural Resources. H. Rept. 119-430, Part I.

Subjects

EcologyEnvironmental assessment, monitoring, researchForests, forestry, treesLand use and conservationPublic contracts and procurementWater qualityWildlife conservation and habitat protection

Sponsor

8 cosponsors

Key Dates

Introduced
January 3, 2025
Last Updated
January 8, 2026
Read Full Text on Congress.gov →
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