Natural Resources

Manage Oregon’s natural resources with less gridlock and better results

Oregon’s forests, rangeland, water, and public lands are central to how we live and work in District 2. They support jobs, recreation, and entire local economies. Right now, wildfire risk is growing, federal processes are slow, and too many decisions are driven by conflict instead of practical outcomes.

We should not have to choose between a strong economy and responsible stewardship

District 2 needs natural resource management that protects working lands, reduces wildfire danger, and reflects the realities of the people who live and work here. When agencies move too slowly or operate without enough local input, communities are left with more risk, more delay, and fewer results.

Too many delays and too little coordination are putting communities at risk

These are the problems driving frustration across rural Oregon and making it harder to protect both local livelihoods and the landscape itself.

Rising Wildfire Risk

Catastrophic fire danger continues to grow as fuel loads build and prevention work does not happen quickly enough.

Delayed Forest Management

Forest management is often inconsistent, delayed, or trapped in long approval processes that prevent timely action.

Slow Federal Decisions

Federal agencies move too slowly and too often make decisions that do not reflect local conditions on the ground.

Conflict Without Progress

Ongoing battles between use and conservation keep communities stuck while practical solutions get pushed aside.

I will fight for active management, local input, and practical stewardship

My focus is on reducing risk, improving results, and making sure public policy supports both healthy lands and strong rural economies.

01

Active forest management and wildfire prevention

Increase fuel reduction, support responsible timber harvest, and invest in forest health to reduce catastrophic fires before they start.

02

Local input in federal land decisions

Ensure landowners, tribes, and local communities have a real seat at the table instead of top-down decisions made far from District 2.

03

Support working lands

Protect the ability of landowners, ranchers, and timber operators to use land productively while maintaining long-term sustainability.

04

Faster, more effective federal processes

Streamline permitting and approvals so projects that improve forest health and reduce fire risk do not get stuck for years.

05

Protect recreation and access

Maintain public access for hunting, fishing, and outdoor recreation that are part of Oregon’s way of life and many local economies.

06

Water and habitat stewardship

Support practical conservation efforts that protect fish, wildlife, and water resources without shutting down responsible land use.

Stewardship should strengthen communities, not stall them

District 2 deserves natural resource policies that reduce wildfire risk, support working lands, protect access, and deliver better outcomes for the people who call this region home.

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