The LFDC NEPA Tracker monitors active NEPA projects across National Forests in Washington, Oregon, California, and Alaska, giving advocates real-time visibility into proposed logging, land management, and restoration activities on public lands.
Projects are updated daily and organized to quickly find new projects and ones currently inviting public participation.
This database contains only the projects that have been published by USFS and that are/were recently in the NEPA analysis page.
Recent policy changes at USFS and the increased use of Categorical Exclusions have drastically reduced the share of USFS projects that get published and/or invite public comment. This means many projects can only be discovered by the public through field monitoring, long after the project has been planned, approved, and contracted.
If your local forests are not yet being tracked, submit feedback using the link above to request the expanded coverage.
There is no 'alert' feature at this time, so check back regularly to learn about new projects and opportunity to comment.
*Impact level assigned automatically, based on keywords and is intended as a general guide only
Showing: Significant Effect
Significant Effect
Significant Effect
Fremont-Winema National Forest
Lake of the Woods Fuel Break
Project uses understory thinning, mastication, and prescribed fire to create and maintain fuel breaks and defensible space. Small trees are thinned, slash piled or burned, and fuels reduced through hand/machine piling, pile burning, underburning, and mastication.
To explore or develop geothermal resources on National Forest lands, the USFS must consent to lease areas nominated by the BLM. This analysis does not authorize ground disturbance, but creates stipulations for authorized leasing areas. https://usfs-public.box.com/s/r56gzyn1msyfvj8md81arv1mo15tgoso
**Please consider personalizing to increase impact**
I support renewable energy, including geothermal energy, but I am concerned that this project has not been fully evaluated for its environmental impacts. Because the project is near sensitive wilderness, steep terrain, and important streams, it should undergo a more complete environmental review before any lease is issued.
My main concerns are:
• The project could affect local streams, groundwater, and fish habitat.
• Drilling and construction could require new roads, heavy equipment access, and year-round traffic in a fragile area.
• The project could disturb wilderness character, wildlife habitat, and the scenic quality of the area.
• The project should not allow fracking in exploratory wells.
• Water for drilling and operations should not be taken from local streams; if water is needed, it should be brought in from municipal sources.
• Strong protections should be required for spills, blowouts, well failures, and site cleanup.
• The project should include clear financial responsibility, including a substantial bond, so cleanup and restoration are fully covered if something goes wrong.
• Any lease should be limited in time and should not remain open indefinitely.
A full Environmental Impact Statement should be prepared before any lease is finalized, and it should clearly spell out what activities will and will not be allowed. At a minimum, each leasing project should require a closed-loop geothermal system, no new roads in sensitive areas, no fracking, no local stream withdrawals, and full restoration of the site if the project does not proceed safely or successfully.
I support clean energy, but only if it can be developed without unnecessary harm to water, wildlife, wilderness values, and nearby communities.
📍 Mt. Baker Ranger District🏷 Minerals and geologyAdded: 2026-05-28
Developing Proposal
Milestone
Date
NEPA Start Date
9/10/2025
Finding/Decision Date
—
Significant Effect
Significant Effect
Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest
Forestwide Thinning Analysis
This analysis will streamline the implementation of commercial thinning treatments designed to increase structural diversity of overstocked and planted stands and provide a sustainable flow of timber to local communities.
📍 Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest🏷 Forest productsAdded: 2026-05-28
Developing Proposal
Milestone
Date
NEPA Start Date
9/3/2025
Finding/Decision Date
—
Significant Effect
Significant Effect
Fremont-Winema National Forest
Buck/Indian North Boundary Fence
There is a need to re-establish the northern boundary of the Buck/Indian cattle allotment to allow better management of the northern section of the allotment.
Working together, Federal, State and Private land managers have the opportunity to reintroduce fire on an interagency landscape in the Paddock Butte area.
The primary purpose of the Paradise Restoration Project is ecosystem restoration. Action is needed to restore healthy forest ecosystems, improve wildlife habitats, and protect life, property, and infrastructure within and adjacent to the project area.
The Forest Service is proposing to implement herbicide treatments for forest re-establishment and trail maintenance to reduce competing vegetation on approximately 43,000 acres of Forest System Lands that have been impacted by recent wildfires.
📍 Fremont-Winema National Forest🏷 Fuels management · Vegetation management (other than forest products)Added: 2026-05-28
Developing Proposal
Acres
426,500
Acres
91,710
Acres
62,160
Acres
51,380
Acres (approx.)
43,000
Acres
8,946
Milestone
Date
NEPA Start Date
2/4/2026
Finding/Decision Date
—
Significant Effect
Significant Effect
Siuslaw National Forest
Five Green Restoration Project
The project purpose is thinning stands less than 80 years old in order to enhance and accelerate old-growth conditions in Late Successional Reserve and Matrix areas. There are commercial thinning actions as well as road work, invasive weed treatments, and slash disposal.
📍 Central Coast Ranger District-ODNRA🏷 Forest products · Vegetation management (other than forest products)Added: 2026-05-28
Developing ProposalCategorical Exclusion
Milestone
Date
NEPA Start Date
2/1/2026
Finding/Decision Date
—
Significant Effect
Significant Effect
Siuslaw National Forest
North Fork Smith Restoration
This is a landscape-scale terrestrial restoration project in the North Fork Smith River watershed area. Activities include: plantation thinning, wildlife habitat enhancement, invasive plant treatments, and road improvements.
📍 Central Coast Ranger District/Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area🏷 Wildlife, fish, rare plants · Forest products · Vegetation management (other than forest products) · Road managementAdded: 2026-05-28
In Progress
Milestone
Date
Scoping Start
08/12/2024
Comment Period
08/12/2024
Objection Period Start
06/02/2025
Decision
08/2025 (Estimated)
Implementation
09/2025 (Estimated)
Significant Effect
Significant Effect
Siuslaw National Forest
Yamina (Yamhill-Willamina) Restoration Project
The Yamina project will focus on commercial thinning to support development of old growth characteristics for the future in the Yamhill-Willamina Watershed.