Governance

Reimagining Fire Policy to

Work for the Most-Impacted Communities

We must recenter long-term solutions to ensure the health and quality of our landscapes.

  • Rooted in Traditional Ecological Knowledge

  • Accountable to the Most-Impacted Communities

  • Created by the next Generation for Generations to Come

We believe this transformation depends on Indigenous and youth voices in policy to design a shift that is:

Growing Tribal Youth Power in Policy

Above: FireGen Director Ryan Reed, Tribal Inclusion Co-Chair and youngest member of the Northwest Forest Plan Federal Advisory Committee.

Recommendations Passed By

Federal Committee


FireGen directly shaped the following Federal Advisory Committee

consensus-built recommendations

to the U.S. Forest Service in the amendments process:


1-16: Recognize and support cultural burning as an inherent Tribal right

1-29: Foster learning and circulate opportunities for Tribal youth

1-77: Make cultural burn liaisons available to uphold treaty and trust responsibilities

1-105: Initiate and partner on public education curriculum and standards that address climate resilience, fire ecology, and Indigenous sovereignty

2-12: Create staff positions to foster educational partnerships and student trainings

2-15: Grow student fire experiences and work pathways

113

passed with Committee consensus, supported by our Director Ryan’s advocacy and efforts, and that of key committee colleagues.

TRIBAL INCLUSION AMENDMENTS

If implemented, these amendments would shift tribal access, rights, and decision-making on lands encompassed by the Northwest Forest Plan.

  • We organized for the appointing of our Director, Indigenous fire practitioner and firefighter Ryan Reed (Karuk, Hupa, Yurok), as the public voice on the Northwest Forest Plan Federal Advisory Committee. This committee will make recommendations for the future of national forests across Indigenous lands in Northern California, Oregon, and Washington. The area includes Ryan’s ancestral homelands.

  • We initiated the creation of a Next Generation Panel for the Wildland Fire Mitigation and Management Commission, one of the first youth panels ever consulted in this kind of federal process. We focused our representation on the panel around Indigenous sovereignty, workforce development, and addressing hostile cultural elements for underrepresented communities in fire management.

  • We brought together experts, professional organizations, and student groups from over 25 states to call on federal land management agencies to establish formal representation for young people in fire and land management policy.

    Read our Letter to National Leaders.

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Fund youth and Indigenous representation to engage and define decisions that impact beneficial fire and critical responses to social, ecological, and climate crises.