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Fix Our Forests Act: Strengthening Wildfire Resilience Through Fireshed Management

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19 Feb, 2025

This post was originally published on Healthy Forest

As wildfires grow increasingly destructive across the nation, the Fix Our Forests Act (FOFA) takes action to mitigate fire risks in the most vulnerable areas called “firesheds.” This bipartisan legislation defines firesheds and introduces a comprehensive strategy to enhance forest management, streamline wildfire prevention efforts, and protect critical forestry projects from obstructive lawsuits.

What Are Firesheds?

Under FOFA, firesheds are large, landscape-scale areas where wildfire risks are high due to fuel loads, climate conditions, and proximity to communities. The bill specifically identifies and prioritizes the top 20% of firesheds at greatest risk as Fireshed Management Areas, ensuring federal, state, and local efforts focus on reducing wildfire exposure where it matters most.

These areas are determined using data from the Fireshed Registry and the Wildfire Crisis Strategy, considering factors such as wildfire exposure to communities, including risks to homes and critical infrastructure; threats to municipal watersheds that supply drinking water; and the likelihood of forest conversion due to severe wildfires.

How the Fix Our Forests Act Increases Forest Management & Wildfire Risk Reduction

FOFA prioritizes proactive land management within firesheds to reduce fuel loads and lower wildfire risks. Key provisions of the bill include:

  • Expanded hazardous fuels management – Allows for mechanical thinning, prescribed burns, timber harvesting, and strategic fuel break construction in Fireshed Management Areas.
  • Streamlined environmental reviews – Enables faster approval of urgent wildfire prevention projects by increasing acreage allowances under existing Categorical Exclusions (CEs).
  • Interagency Coordination through the Fireshed Center – A new federal office will integrate data, enhance fire behavior prediction models, and unify decision-making across multiple agencies, ensuring a more effective response to wildfire threats.
  • Shared Stewardship Agreements – FOFA promotes cross-boundary collaboration between federal, state, and tribal governments, ensuring that land managers work together on fireshed management projects.

By emphasizing science-driven wildfire risk reduction, FOFA ensures that efforts are focused on at-risk communities and critical infrastructure while preserving forest health.

Preventing Frivolous Lawsuits Against Essential Forestry Work

One of the biggest obstacles to effective wildfire mitigation has been legal challenges that delay or block forest management projects. FOFA protects fireshed management efforts from frivolous lawsuits by:

  • Limiting injunctions – Courts can only halt a fireshed project if it poses a “proximate and substantial environmental harm” with no alternative remedy available.
  • Restricting legal claims – Plaintiffs can no longer derail projects over minor procedural concerns. Instead, if a court finds an issue, it may remand the project back to agencies with a 180-day deadline for correction, allowing essential forestry work to continue in the meantime.
  • Preventing endless delays – The bill prohibits courts from setting aside or vacating fireshed management projects unless they meet strict environmental harm criteria.

These legal safeguards ensure that critical wildfire prevention work moves forward swiftly, protecting lives, property, and ecosystems from catastrophic wildfires.

The House of Representatives passed the Fix Our Forests Act in January with bipartisan support, but the Senate has yet to act. We need your voice to urge the Senate to pass this bill without delay and send it to the President’s desk! Please take two minutes to send a message from our web site.

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Source: Healthy Forest

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Grant funding open for sustainable organisations

Grant funding open for sustainable organisations

Submissions are open for the annual Canon Oceania Grants program. The 2025 program provides $40,000 in grants to support community organisations across Australia and New Zealand.

The program supports community groups to share their stories, foster understanding and strengthen their impact. Canon will award grants across the categories of Education, Community, Environment and First Nations (AU)/Cultural (NZ).

The Canon Oceania Grants program aims to empower community groups with the technology and resources they need to tell and amplify their stories to make a greater impact.

“Canon Oceania is proud to support the incredible work of grassroots organisations across New Zealand. Guided by our Kyosei philosophy of living and working together for the common good, our belief in the role communities play as the fabric of our society is deeply embedded in everything we do,” said Kotaro Fukushima, Managing Director for Canon Oceania. “Our Grants Program aims to empower these groups to achieve their goals and make a real difference in the lives of others. By providing access to technology and funding, we hope to help them amplify their impact and create positive change in our society.”

The 2025 grants will be awarded under the following categories:

Community Grant — open to organisations with their community at the heart of what they do, ranging from not-for-profits to grassroots groups.
Education Grant — open to schools and other educational centres for both children and adults.
Environment Grant — open to not-for-profits and organisations dedicated to raising awareness of the protection of the environment or promoting sustainable practices.
First Nations/Cultural Grant — open to First Nations community groups and organisations. It was launched for the first time in 2024.
 

Each grant awards the recipient with AU$5000 ($2500 cash and $2500 in Canon products).

Over the last 19 years, the Canon Oceania Grants program has provided support to over 120 community organisations and schools across Oceania, with more than $600,000 in monetary and product support. Its annual grants program helps provide not-for-profits with funding and the latest cameras, printers and storytelling gear to share their stories and amplify their voices.

Canon continued its partnership with 2018 Environment Grant winner, Rainforest Rescue, supporting its work in restoring the NightWings area of the Daintree Rainforest, helping to replant native trees and protecting the diverse wildlife habitat.

“There is immense power in an image, especially to engage and educate people, here in Australia and all over the world, about the work we do to restore the rainforest. When people can’t come to the Daintree, it’s important to be able to bring it to them,” said Kristin Canning, Partnerships Director for Rainforest Rescue. “If we didn’t have community engagement, we wouldn’t be able to do this work that is so vital to what we do. The Canon Oceania Grant has empowered us to invite people into the soul of what we do.

“The Canon Oceania Grant has also given us high-quality imaging to so we can study the species we find and ensure that what we’re looking at is what we think it is. It gives us confidence to know that we’re achieving our biodiversity objectives and doing the right thing by the rainforest and the wildlife here.”

Canon also continues to support The Reconnect Project, the 2024 Community Grant winner, in its mission of community empowerment.

“Winning the Grant from Canon has allowed us to up our game professionally in terms of the types of messages that we can communicate and the look and the appeal of those messages,” said Annette Brodie, Founder and CEO for Reconnect Project.

“With professional equipment, we’re able to record high-quality training videos and information about our services, we’re able to interview our case workers that are providing devices to clients and getting their stories. And that then helps us to spread our message to a wider audience, and particularly to corporates who might be looking to donate their decommissioned tech.”

Submissions are open now via the Canon website. The wider community will vote on finalists in August, and winners will be announced in September.

Image caption: The 2024 Education Grant winner, Farm My School.

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