S-1300-113
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 406.
What it does
This bill would authorize the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to enter into contracts with private companies or other entities to perform land management work — such as thinning trees, controlling wildfires, restoring watersheds, and removing invasive plants — on national forests and public lands. Contractors could be paid in part by keeping the value of timber or other forest products they remove. Contracts would be capped at 10 years, selected on a best-value basis, and subject to annual congressional reporting and multiparty monitoring.
Who benefits
Rural and timber-dependent communities near national forests and public lands, who would gain local employment and economic activity from contracting work. Private forestry and logging companies eligible to bid on stewardship contracts. Wildlife and fisheries interests that support active forest management. Local governments that may benefit from improved watershed health and reduced wildfire risk to nearby communities. Ranchers and outdoor recreation businesses in areas where forest health is improved.
Who is hurt
Environmental advocacy organizations and individuals who oppose commercial timber harvesting on public lands, as the bill allows contractors to offset service costs with removed timber. Competing contractors who may lose bids under the best-value selection process. Taxpayers if contract oversight is insufficient and costs exceed projected offsets from timber sales. Wilderness-adjacent communities if increased logging activity affects air quality, wildlife corridors, or scenic values. Workers in other federal land management programs if stewardship contracting displaces traditional agency employment.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that stewardship contracting is a proven, cost-effective tool that allows the federal government to accomplish critical land management work — reducing catastrophic wildfire risk, restoring watersheds, and improving forest health — at lower cost to taxpayers by allowing contractors to offset service fees with the value of removed timber and forest products. They contend that overgrown, unhealthy forests are a direct result of decades of fire suppression and insufficient active management, and that this bill provides the long-term contract certainty (up to 10 years) that private partners need to invest in equipment and local workforces. Supporters also emphasize that the bill requires multiparty monitoring, annual congressional reporting, and best-value contractor selection, ensuring accountability and community input. Rural economies near national forests, they argue, would benefit from stable, skilled jobs tied to responsible forest stewardship.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that stewardship contracting creates a structural incentive to prioritize commercially valuable timber removal over genuine ecological restoration, since contractors can recoup costs through logging — potentially skewing project selection toward areas with marketable trees rather than areas of greatest conservation need. They contend that 10-year contracts lock the government into long-term commitments that may be difficult to modify if environmental conditions change or if monitoring reveals harm. Critics also raise concerns that "best-value" selection criteria could be defined in ways that favor large timber companies over smaller, community-based operators, undermining the stated goal of benefiting local rural communities. Additionally, opponents argue that allowing contracts to be treated as timber sales may circumvent environmental review requirements that would otherwise apply to logging on public lands, reducing public participation and legal accountability for decisions affecting shared natural resources.