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Supreme court to hear arguments in fight over birthright citizenship; Repeal of clean energy incentives would hurt AK economy, families, advocates say; Iowa dairy farm manure spill kills 100,000 fish; Final piece of AL's Sipsey Wilderness protected after 50-year effort.

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House Republicans get closer to enacting billions in Medicaid cuts. The Israeli government says it'll resume humanitarian aid in Gaza, and Montana's governor signs a law tightening the voter registration window.

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Millions of rural Americans would lose programs meant to help them buy a home under the Trump administration's draft 2026 budget, independent medical practices and physicians in rural America are becoming rare, and gravity-fed acequias are a centerpiece of democratic governance in New Mexico.

Boot camps to fill wildland firefighter workforce shortage cut due to DEI

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Thursday, March 27, 2025   

Wildland firefighting is a tough job and the industry has long struggled with worker retention.

Training boot camps have helped bring new firefighters, especially women, into the fold in recent years but federal cuts could threaten progress. About 84% of federal wildland firefighters are men, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Boot camps targeting women have been popular and 14 were scheduled for this year.

Riva Duncan, vice president of the group Grassroots Wildland Firefighters, worked in fire for over three decades and said the boot camps offered a "safe environment" to raise concerns.

"Beyond the actual required training, just having discussions about: 'Well, how do you address hygiene? What do I do if I feel like I'm being treated unfairly?'" Duncan outlined. "Those kinds of questions that don't get covered in a classroom setting."

Since the boot camps are designed to increase workforce diversity, they have been cut under the Trump administration's DEI rollbacks. Following the firing and then rehiring of 6,000 U.S. Department of Agriculture employees since February, including some with firefighting duties, the Interior Department announced permanent pay raises for wildland firefighters in the new federal appropriations budget.

The U.S. Forest Service saw a 45% attrition rate of wildland firefights over the last three years. Duncan stressed the DEI cuts will not help.

"We need people who want to do this work," Duncan pointed out. "We need the kind of people that value working on the public lands and serving the American taxpayers. And so this has detrimental effects to the overall recruitment and retention strategy to try and get firefighters into these jobs."

According to the USDA, about 65,000 wildfires burned nearly 9 million acres across the U.S. in 2024.


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