Opinion
I believe it is critically important for the Trump Administration and the Musk-led DOGE effort to find waste, fraud and abuse in the federal government to address this country’s debt crisis. Certainly, one strategy is to review government agencies and programs that may or may not provide an important public benefit.
The Forest Service mission statement is “Caring for the Land and Serving the People.” That important goal has historically been implemented by competent leadership that directs a resource and recreation “boots on the ground” workforce to actively manage forested lands via thinning trees and brush with chainsaws, piling fuels with dozers and excavators, controlled burning, or by employing goats for grazing. Sometimes multiple methods are used in the same area, for example, piling small dead fuels and then burning those piles.
The agency states in a 2023 publication that it manages the largest trail network in the world that has more than 160,000 miles of trails that could circle the globe six and a half times! And, those trails provide vast opportunities for visitors to connect with nature via a hike, mountain-bike, ATV, dirt-bike, SxS, dual-sport or adventure motorcycle, 4WD, e-bike, horseback, snowmobile, snowshoe and more.
The recent data also shows increasing numbers of people are seeking out National Forest System trails. In addition, it states those trails are managed and maintained through the efforts of agency employees, tribes, partners, volunteers, contractors, permittees and communities — collectively known as the “Trail Community.”
I believe the current “probationary or seasonal” layoffs were mistakenly focused on axing the recreation and forestry technician corps composed of lower wage GS 3/4/5 on-the-ground employees and wrongly targeted a key workforce that was — to even the most casual observer - not the obvious source of fiscal bloat.
Rather, the main culprit needing fiscal reform can be found in the Regulatory Compliance Industrial Complex that is composed of D.C or regional-based high level career GS 13/14/15 siloed staff that leaves nothing but crumbs to support mission critical on-site recreation and resource management efforts.
Reformers should also take a hard look at a Forest Service cultural approach that over-emphasizes “too many cooks in the kitchen” with multiple layers of approvals and oversight that reduce effectiveness and efficiency. They should emphasize a strategic and systematic approach — including “directed reassignments” — to reduce even the higher level positions with an objective of getting the right positions placed where they are most needed.
I believe that budget reduction efforts should focus more sharply on bloated high cost regulatory administrative/legal systems that rob scarce funds from a field workforce that provides key services to directly benefit our natural resources, rural economies and the American public.
Don Amador has been in the trail advocacy and recreation management profession for 35 years. He is president of Quiet Warrior Racing LLC, past president/CEO and current board member of the Post Wildfire OHV Recovery Alliance, and a co-founder and core-team member on FireScape Mendocino, a forest health collaborative that is part of the National Fire Learning Network. Amador served as an AD Driver for the Forest Service North Zone Fire Cache during the 2022, 2023 and 2024 fire seasons. A northwest California native, Amador writes from his home in Cottonwood, California.
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- Written by: Don Amador
With failed and broken promises of success and prosperity for our communities, cannabis cultivation in Lake County is at a crossroads.
Recall in 2016, ballot Measure C proposed a tax on cannabis cultivation within our county. The measure promised a tax rate of “ … $1.00 per square foot of an outdoor cultivation site, $2.00 per square foot of a mixed-light cultivation site, and $3.00 per square foot of an indoor cultivation site, subject to annual Consumer Price Index increases, and generating annual revenue of approximately $8 million per average year …”
With these promises, on Nov. 8, 2016, Lake County voters overwhelmingly voted “Yes” on Measure C. So what has happened since then?
In 2018, the county approved a new cannabis ordinance, and the floodgates opened. Permits of all sizes were presented and approved by the Lake County Planning Department and the Planning Commission. Today, more than 150 approved cultivation projects are in Lake County, totaling over 20 million square feet. Based on Measure C’s rates, cannabis should provide over $24 million of annual tax revenue to help our communities.
But the county isn’t realizing $24 million in tax revenue — not even close. After 2020, the cannabis industry began spiraling relentlessly downward — not just in Lake County but statewide and nationwide. In an effort to support the failing industry, in 2022 the Board of Supervisors approved a temporary 50% cannabis tax cut and applied it to the smaller canopy area, further reducing anticipated revenues – this was extended through December 2025. Still, the county should be realizing about $11 million in cannabis tax revenue.
But the county isn’t receiving $11 million in cannabis tax revenue — again, not even close. At the Jan. 28 governance presentation to the Board of Supervisors, Lake County's Administrative Office reported 2023-24 cannabis tax revenue of $2,582,315 — a vast reduction from what was promised by Measure C. Equally concerning is that the expenditures to manage cannabis were $2,517,150 — a difference of barely $65,165.
Now we are at a crossroads. In the county treasurer’s Aug. 27, 2024 report to the Board of Supervisors, active cultivation is down 80%. Many growers opt out, scale back or abandon their sites altogether.
The dream of cannabis-funded success promised by Measure C is gone. As a community we need to be proactive and take a fact-based approach — are we better off placing our limited staff resources in more productive areas?
We request the Board of Supervisors hold a public meeting to address these financial discrepancies, look at the cannabis revenue generated versus the expenses and determine if the county is receiving the return on investment the voters expected.
Also, as 70% of the permits in Lake County are for small cannabis growers — many struggling to make it work — we request a robust discussion on how to restore their prosperity. With another 100 pending small and large cannabis applications in the queue, does the county run the risk of dooming these remaining growers to failure?
Lake County Community Action Project’s founding members are Peter Luchetti, Angela Amaral, Jesse Cude, Holly Harris, Margaux Kambara, Tom Lajcik, Chuck Lamb and Monica Rosenthal.
Recall in 2016, ballot Measure C proposed a tax on cannabis cultivation within our county. The measure promised a tax rate of “ … $1.00 per square foot of an outdoor cultivation site, $2.00 per square foot of a mixed-light cultivation site, and $3.00 per square foot of an indoor cultivation site, subject to annual Consumer Price Index increases, and generating annual revenue of approximately $8 million per average year …”
With these promises, on Nov. 8, 2016, Lake County voters overwhelmingly voted “Yes” on Measure C. So what has happened since then?
In 2018, the county approved a new cannabis ordinance, and the floodgates opened. Permits of all sizes were presented and approved by the Lake County Planning Department and the Planning Commission. Today, more than 150 approved cultivation projects are in Lake County, totaling over 20 million square feet. Based on Measure C’s rates, cannabis should provide over $24 million of annual tax revenue to help our communities.
But the county isn’t realizing $24 million in tax revenue — not even close. After 2020, the cannabis industry began spiraling relentlessly downward — not just in Lake County but statewide and nationwide. In an effort to support the failing industry, in 2022 the Board of Supervisors approved a temporary 50% cannabis tax cut and applied it to the smaller canopy area, further reducing anticipated revenues – this was extended through December 2025. Still, the county should be realizing about $11 million in cannabis tax revenue.
But the county isn’t receiving $11 million in cannabis tax revenue — again, not even close. At the Jan. 28 governance presentation to the Board of Supervisors, Lake County's Administrative Office reported 2023-24 cannabis tax revenue of $2,582,315 — a vast reduction from what was promised by Measure C. Equally concerning is that the expenditures to manage cannabis were $2,517,150 — a difference of barely $65,165.
Now we are at a crossroads. In the county treasurer’s Aug. 27, 2024 report to the Board of Supervisors, active cultivation is down 80%. Many growers opt out, scale back or abandon their sites altogether.
The dream of cannabis-funded success promised by Measure C is gone. As a community we need to be proactive and take a fact-based approach — are we better off placing our limited staff resources in more productive areas?
We request the Board of Supervisors hold a public meeting to address these financial discrepancies, look at the cannabis revenue generated versus the expenses and determine if the county is receiving the return on investment the voters expected.
Also, as 70% of the permits in Lake County are for small cannabis growers — many struggling to make it work — we request a robust discussion on how to restore their prosperity. With another 100 pending small and large cannabis applications in the queue, does the county run the risk of dooming these remaining growers to failure?
Lake County Community Action Project’s founding members are Peter Luchetti, Angela Amaral, Jesse Cude, Holly Harris, Margaux Kambara, Tom Lajcik, Chuck Lamb and Monica Rosenthal.
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- Written by: Lake County Community Action Project





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