
USDA invests $106 million to keep 'forests working,' boost logging
July 31 (UPI) -- U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins today announced the U.S. Forest Service is investing $106 million to support state and landowner efforts to conserve private working forestlands, according to a press release.
The United States Department of Agriculture said the projects funded will "protect forests vital to the economic and social fabric of local communities - ensuring they remain productive, working forests for Americans and tourists to use and enjoy."
"Just like our farms and ranches, working forests are part of the backbone of rural America -- providing jobs, timber, clean water, and places for families to hunt, fish, camp, hike and make lifelong memories," said Secretary Brooke Rollins. "For too long our forests have been left idle, only to burn and devastate communities. President [Donald] Trump has made it a priority to properly manage our forests, empowering USDA and our state partners to protect and unleash the full potential of their forestlands to help their communities grow and thrive."
The Forest Service will fund 10 projects across 177,000 acres of state and privately owned forestlands in Arkansas, Hawaii, Iowa, Michigan, Mississippi, New York, Oregon and South Carolina.
In April, the USDA announced it will begin allowing logging in U.S. national forests to spur timber production amid reciprocal tariffs on other nations.
The USDA memo said it plans to expands U.S. timber production by 25%. It also will "empower the U.S. Forest Service to expedite work on the ground and carry out authorized emergency actions to reduce wildfire risk and save American lives and communities," according to a news release.
To achieve this, the Forest Service will remove National Environmental Policy Act processes and reduce contracting burdens.
Rollins said the projects will improve rural economies and avoid wildfire risk.
Environmental groups are against the change.
In March, Trump signed two executive orders that called for the expansion of timber production even for projects that might harm endangered species, and a review of how importing lumber might harm "national security."
"This executive order sets in motion a chainsaw free-for-all on our federal forests," Blaine Miller-McFeeley, a representative for the group Earthjustice, said in a statement.
"Americans treasure our forests for all the benefits they provide, such as recreation, clean air, and clean drinking water. But this order ignores these values and opens the door for wild lands to be plundered, for nothing more than corporate gain. In the long run, this will worsen the effects of climate change, while also destroying critical wildlife habitat."
The Sierra Club said the order was a giveaway to the logging industry.
The United States, China, Russia and Canada are the largest producers of wood globally.
In 2023, plans for the U.S. Forest Service to plant more than a billion trees by 2030 -- to shade and cool cities, protect water and fight climate change -- are being threatened by seedling scarcity and funding issues, a study by the journal Bioscience found.
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Los Angeles Times
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- Los Angeles Times
California, other states sue Trump over order threatening gender-affirming care providers
California and a coalition of other liberal-led states sued the Trump administration Friday over efforts to end gender-affirming care for transgender, intersex and nonbinary children and young adults nationwide — calling them an unconstitutional attack on LGBTQ+ patients, healthcare providers and states' rights. The lawsuit was brought by California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta and officials from 15 other states and the District of Columbia. It challenges a Jan. 28 executive order by President Trump that denounced gender-affirming care as 'mutilation' and called on U.S. Justice Department officials to effectively enforce a ban, including by launching investigations into healthcare providers. The lawsuit notes the Justice Department last month sent more than 20 subpoenas to doctors and clinics that have provided such care nationwide, with justice officials suggesting they may face criminal prosecution. Bonta's office, in a statement, said such efforts 'have no legal basis and are intended to discourage providers from offering lifesaving healthcare that is lawful under state law.' The lawsuit asks a federal court in Massachusetts to vacate Trump's order in its entirety for exceeding federal authority and undermining state laws that guarantee equal access to healthcare. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. Trump made reining in transgender rights a key promise of his presidential campaign. Upon taking office, he moved swiftly to do so through executive orders, funding cuts and litigation. And in many ways, it has worked — particularly when it comes gender-affirming care for minors. Clinics across the country that had provided such care have closed their doors in response to the threats and funding cuts. That includes the renowned Center for Transyouth Health and Development at Children's Hospital Los Angeles, one of the largest and oldest pediatric gender clinics in the U.S. The clinic told thousands of its patients and their families that it was shuttering last month. Other clinics have similarly closed nationwide, radically reducing the availability of such care in the U.S. Republicans and other Trump supporters have cheered the closures as a major win, and they praised the president for protecting impressionable and confused children from so-called woke medical professionals pushing what they allege to be dangerous and irreversible treatments. Bonta said in the Friday statement that Trump and his administration's 'relentless attacks' on such care were 'cruel and irresponsible' and endangered 'already vulnerable adolescents whose health and well-being are at risk.' 'These actions have created a chilling effect in which providers are pressured to scale back on their care for fear of prosecution, leaving countless individuals without the critical care they need and are entitled to under law,' Bonta said. Mainstream U.S. medical associations have supported gender-affirming care for minors experiencing gender dysphoria for years. They and LGBTQ+ rights organizations have accused Trump and his supporters of mischaracterizing that care, which includes therapy, counseling and support for social transitioning, and can include puberty blockers, hormone treatment and, in rarer circumstances, mastectomies. Queer advocates, many patients and their families say such care is life-saving, alleviating intense distress — and suicidal thoughts — in transgender and other gender-nonconforming youth. They and many mainstream medical experts acknowledge that gender-affirming care for young people is still a developing field, but say it is also based on decades of solid research by medical professionals who are far better equipped than politicians to help families make difficult medical decisions. However, as the number of children who identify as transgender or nonbinary has rapidly increased in recent years, that argument has failed to take hold in many parts of the country. Conservatives and Republican leaders have grown increasingly alarmed by such care, pointing to young people who changed their minds about transitioning and now regret the care they received. 'Countless children soon regret that they have been mutilated and begin to grasp the horrifying tragedy that they will never be able to conceive children of their own or nurture their children through breastfeeding,' Trump's executive order stated. Trump and others have escalated tensions further by spreading misinformation about kids being whisked away from school to have their gentials mutilated without their parents' knowledge — which is not happening. The battle has played out in the courts, in part as a state's rights issue. In June, the Supreme Court ruled that conservative states may ban puberty blockers and hormone treatments for transgender teens, with the court's conservative majority finding that states are generally free to set their own standards of medical care. The Trump administration, however, has not taken the same view. Instead, it has aggressively tried to eradicate gender-affirming care nationwide, regardless of state laws — like those in California — that protect it. Trump's Jan. 28 executive order, titled 'Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation,' claimed that 'medical professionals are maiming and sterilizing a growing number of impressionable children under the radical and false claim that adults can change a child's sex through a series of irreversible medical interventions.' It defined children as anyone under the age of 19, and said that moving forward, the U.S. wouldn't 'fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support the so-called 'transition' of a child from one sex to another,' but would 'rigorously enforce all laws that prohibit or limit these destructive and life-altering procedures.' The states' lawsuit focuses on one particular section of that order, which directed Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi to convene state attorneys general and other law enforcement officials nationwide to begin investigating gender-affirming care providers and other groups that 'may be misleading the public about long-term side effects of chemical and surgical mutilation.' The section suggested those investigations could be based on laws against 'female genital mutilation,' or even around a 1938 law known as the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, which authorizes the Food and Drug Administration to regulate food, drugs, medical devices and cosmetics. On July 9, Bondi announced the Justice Department's subpoenas to healthcare providers, saying doctors and hospitals 'that mutilated children in the service of a warped ideology will be held accountable.' On July 25, The Times reported that Bill Essayli, the Trump administration's controversial pick for U.S. attorney in L.A., had floated the idea of criminally charging doctors and hospitals for providing gender-affirming care, according to two federal law enforcement sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. The targeting of gender-affirming care is part of a wider effort by the administration to eliminate transgender rights more broadly, in part on the premise that transgender people do not exist. On his first day in office, Trump issued another executive order declaring there are only two sexes and denouncing what he called the 'gender ideology' of the left. His administration has sought to limit the options transgender people have to get passports that reflect their identities, and the Justice Department has sued California over its policies allowing transgender girls to compete against other girls in youth sports. Many transgender Americans are looking for ways to flee the country. Still, many in the LGBTQ+ community fear the attacks are only going to get worse. Among those who are most scared are the parents and families of transgender kids — including those who believe their health records may have been collected under the Justice Department's subpoenas. One mother of a Children's Hospital patient told The Times last month that she is terrified the Justice Department is 'going to come after parents and use the female genital mutilation law ... to prosecute parents and separate me from my child.' Bonta is leading the lawsuit along with the attorneys general of Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts and New York. Joining them are Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and the attorneys general of Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Rhode Island and Wisconsin.


Los Angeles Times
a few seconds ago
- Los Angeles Times
Migrants from Venezuela detained at an El Salvador prison open up about the abuse they endured
In the weeks since the U.S. government released hundreds of Venezuelan nationals incarcerated at El Salvador's infamous Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) and sent them back to their home country, several detainees have spoken out about the abuses they endured. Times staff writer Kate Linthicum and special correspondent Mery Mogollón spoke to Jerce Reyes Barrios, a 36-year-old former professional soccer player, who left Venezuela last year and tried to apply for asylum at the Otay Mesa border crossing in California. He was among the more than 250 men accused of belonging to the Tren de Aragua street gang and sent to CECOT by the Trump administration in March. Reyes Barrios denies ever belonging to the criminal organization. His attorney, Linette Tobin, said in a court statement that her client was accused of being a gang member because of an arm tattoo that featured a soccer ball decorated with a crown — a nod to Spanish club Real Madrid CF. He says the maltreatment began the moment they were removed from the plane. 'Welcome to El Salvador, you sons of bitches,' Reyes Barrios claims the prison guards told them. 'You've arrived at the Terrorist Confinement Center. Hell on earth.' Inside, Reyes Barrios said the men were constantly beaten. They were kept in overcrowded cells and slept on metal beds. They were hardly fed, were given contaminated water and were supervised by a sadistic staff. 'There was blood, vomit and people passed out on the floor,' he said. Reyes Barrios' account of what he experienced at CECOT is consistent with what other former detainees have described. 'The doctor would watch us get beaten and then ask us 'How are you feeling?' with a smile,' Marco Jesús Basulto Salinas, a 35-year-old kitchen worker who had temporary protected status, told the Washington Post. 'It was the most perverse form of humiliation.' Some of the worst abuse took place at a cell dubbed 'La Isla.' It was there where Andry José Hernández Romero, a 31-year-old hairdresser who left Venezuela out of fear of being persecuted for being gay, says he was sexually assaulted. Conditions inside CECOT were so bad that some detainees attempted suicide, while others contemplated it. 'I'd rather die or kill myself than to keep living through this experience,' 39-year-old Juan José Ramos Ramos told ProPublica. 'Being woken up every day at 4 a.m. to be insulted and beaten. For wanting to shower, for asking for something so basic. ... Hearing your brothers getting beaten, crying for help.' At one point, the men staged a hunger strike. When that didn't work, some of them cut themselves and wrote messages on sheets and in the walls using their own blood. 'We wanted them to see we were willing to die,' Neiyerver Adrián León Rengel, another former detainee, told the Post. After nearly four months of alleged abuse, the men were told that they were finally going home. Their release was part of a prison exchange deal— Venezuela agreed to free 10 jailed Americans. 'At that moment, we all shouted with joy,' Reyes Barrios said. 'I think that was my only happy day at CECOT.' The Times reached out to a spokesperson for Nayib Bukele, El Salvador's president, seeking comment, but did not get a reply. For its part, the Trump administration is refusing to acknowledge any wrongdoing. 'Once again, the media is falling all over themselves to defend criminal illegal gang members,' Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, told the Washington Post. 'We hear far too much about gang members and criminals' false sob stories and not enough about their victims.' According to internal data obtained by ProPublica, the Trump administration knew that nearly 200 of the men sent to CECOT had not been convicted of crimes in the U.S. If you're looking for something to do this weekend that's both fun and free, come join the De Los team at 350 S. Grand Ave. on Saturday from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m., as we co-present a Grand Performances concert headlined by Adrian Quesada. The multi-instrumentalist will be performing songs from 'Boleros Psicodélicos,' a duo of albums released in 2022 and 2025 that takes boleros — love ballads popular across Latin America — and injects them with a healthy dose of psychedelia. Every track on both records features a different singer, so performing 'Boleros Psicodélicos' live is logistically difficult given Quesada's lengthy list of collaborators. Joining him onstage on Saturday will be Gaby Moreno, Trish Toledo, Angélica Garcia, Mireya Ramos and one or two surprise guests. El Marchante and Explorare will kick the night off. The De Los team will have a booth at the event, where we'll be giving out free posters and copies of our 'De Los 101' zine for subscribers of the Latinx Files. We will also be raffling off tote bags! You can RSVP here. Starting Monday, I'll be going on paternity leave for two months. But fret not, for I leave you in the very capable hands of De Los writer Carlos De Loera — next week will not be his first rodeo. Working on this newsletter has been one of the most fulfilling professional experiences I've had, and while I'll miss it, I'm very much looking forward to having quality baby bonding time. I'll return in time to write the Oct. 10 edition of the Latinx Files. Unless otherwise noted, all stories in this section are from the L.A. Times.


New York Post
a few seconds ago
- New York Post
RNC chair Michael Whatley launches NC Senate bid, opening door to new leadership
WASHINGTON — Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley has formally kicked off his bid for the hotly-contested North Carolina Senate seat, opening the door for new leadership at the top of the official GOP. Whatley can remain RNC chair up until the vote for his replacement, which has yet to be officially scheduled. His departure will mark yet another change in leadership, as Lara Trump stepped down as RNC co-chair in December in favor of a weekend hosting gig on Fox News. Democrats have not won a Senate seat in North Carolina since 2008, but have high hopes of replacing retiring GOP Sen. Thom Tillis with former Gov. Roy Cooper. An initial poll by Emerson College released Friday showed Cooper leading Whatley by six percentage points among all voters (47%-41%) with 12% undecided. 3 President Donald Trump, left, takes the stage with NCGOP Chairman Michael Whatley after being announced at the NCGOP state convention on June 5, 2021 in Greenville, North Carolina. Getty Images To replace Whatley, President Trump has backed Florida state Sen. Joe Gruters, the current RNC treasurer. Gruters, 48, has made headlines in the Sunshine State for his tense relationship with Gov. Ron DeSantis, who called him out July 16 by saying: 'Gruters has taken major positions contrary to what our voter base wants to do.' The governor specifically criticized Gruters for opposing legislation to reduce the power of teachers' unions in the state and campaigning for a constitutional amendment that would have largely decriminalized marijuana in Florida. Gruters also was at the center of a fight between DeSantis and the Republican-controlled Florida legislature over illegal immigration after lawmakers initially rejected an enforcement proposal by the governor in favor of legislation that would have weakened DeSantis' power. 'He was the author and architect of this terrible amnesty bill, which would have made everything I've done — including Alligator Alcatraz — to help President Trump's illegal immigration removal agenda illegal in the state of Florida,' DeSantis said July 16. On Friday, however, Trump praised Gruters on Truth Social as a 'MAGA Warrior … who has been with us from the very beginning.' 3 Florida state Sen. Joe Gruters, of Sarasota, was reelected in August 2022, with the help of an endorsement from Donald Trump. THOMAS BENDER/HERALD-TRIBUNE / USA TODAY NETWORK / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images 'As State Senator and Chairman of the Republican Party of Florida, Joe helped us deliver massive and historic Victories across the State, including my three BIG WINS in 2016, 2020, and 2024!' Trump wrote. 'As RNC Treasurer, Joe has been a Fierce Advocate for our Movement, and fought tirelessly to ensure a highly functioning, fiscally responsible, and financially successful RNC. He will be a wonderful Chairman!' The new chair will lead the party into the 2026 midterms, with Trump saying he has high hopes for Republicans to 'increase their margins' in both the House and Senate. The new chair will be aided by Trump's $1.4 billion war chest that will be used to back some of his 'friends' running across the country. 3 People wave their signs during Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley's campaign launch event for North Carolina's open US Senate seat, Thursday, July 31, 2025, in Gastonia, N.C. AP To replace Gruters as RNC Treasurer, Trump endorsed Jennifer Saul-Rich, who has served as a national committee woman from New York since 2004. 'Joe Gruters and Jennifer Saul-Rich are 100% America First, and I know they will do an incredible job, and secure Great Success for Republicans all across our Country,' Trump wrote. 'Joe and Jennifer have my Complete and Total Endorsement — THEY WILL NEVER LET YOU DOWN!'.