Secretary of Agriculture Issues 2026 Wildfire Readiness Memorandum Ahead of Active Fire Season

usda logo.png

United States Department of Agriculture

(Washington, D.C., April 29, 2026, USDA) – U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins today issued a new Secretarial Memorandum (PDF, 882 KB) and letter (PDF, 932 KB) directing the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service to heighten national wildfire readiness, accelerate community-focused risk reduction, and strengthen firefighter health and safety for the 2026 fire year.

“Under President Trump’s leadership, we have continuously implemented major reforms restoring active forest management, returning the Forest Service to a world‑leading forestry and fire management organization, and modernizing wildfire response and improving coordination across federal agencies. This fire season we are prepared to continue our full suppression strategy to suppress fire starts quickly to protect our forests and rural communities,” said Secretary Rollins. “This memorandum ensures the entire Department is aligned, prepared and focused on responding quickly and effectively to protect communities and the natural resources Americans depend on. Proper forest management remains central to this effort – reducing wildfire risk, strengthening rural economies, providing affordable, high‑quality lumber for American homes, and preserving the nation’s landscapes for generations to come.”

The 2026 Secretarial Memorandum advances President Trump’s directives to streamline federal wildfire prevention and response, building on progress made under the 2025 Executive Order on Empowering Commonsense Wildfire Prevention and Response. It directs all USDA Mission Areas to maintain full qualification readiness, surge staffing capacity and streamlined contracting support for wildland fire operations. It also directs the Forest Service to modernize performance measures for hazardous fuels work and work with federal partners to remove barriers to prescribed fire and increase occupational health and safety for firefighters. The memo reaffirms that USDA is ready for the 2026 fire season and will continue to be driven by public and firefighter safety as the top priority.

USDA enters the 2026 fire season with the strongest and most coordinated wildland firefighting capability in the world. The Forest Service can mobilize more than 28,000 wildfire responders and over 22,000 contracted resources across 2,500 vendors. The Department also manages the majority of the federal firefighting aviation fleet including helicopters and airtankers nationwide. USDA continues to work closely with federal partners, state and tribal governments and local fire departments to ensure a unified, aggressive and highly coordinated approach to wildfire management.

“Wildfire response is a shared responsibility, and USDA will remain vigilant,” said Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz. “Our firefighters are prepared, our agencies are coordinated, and we will continue doing everything we can to protect communities and the people who defend them.”

###

Press release provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture

Related Stories
The Ranger Road Fire spreads from the Oklahoma Panhandle into Kansas as high winds and red flag conditions persist
Small Business Administration Deputy Administrator Bill Briggs joined us with an update on how the SBA is working to support rural communities and small businesses across the country.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order this week to accelerate domestic production of phosphorus and glyphosate, signaling that farm input availability is now treated as a national security risk.
Federal aid helps, but producers will bear most of the losses. Balance sheets may look stable, but margins remain fragile without policy support.
RFD NEWS Markets Specialist Tony St. James reviews the USDA’s Farms and Land in Farms 2025 Summary.
Biofuel and corn producers await proposal as Renewable Fuels Association pushes for expanded ethanol access.