Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics

Our mission is to protect national forests and to reform the U.S. Forest Service by advocating environmental ethics, educating citizens, and defending whistleblowers.

FSEEE is made up of thousands of concerned citizens, present, former, and retired Forest Service employees, other government resource managers, and activists working to change the Forest Service's basic land management philosophy.

FSEEE is a unique concept—a national organization of government employees holding the Forest Service accountable for responsible land stewardship. FSEEE believes that the land is a public trust, to be passed with reverence from generation to generation. The Forest Service and other public agencies must follow the footsteps of Aldo Leopold, a pioneer of conservation, and become leaders in the quest for a new resource ethic. Together we must work toward an ecologically and economically sustainable future.

FSEEE Program Areas     

Public Education - FSEEE produces and distributes publications to increase awareness of needed Forest Service reform. These publications include the quarterly Forest Magazine, detailed monitoring reports and a middle-school environmental curriculum. In addition, FSEEE coordinates informative speaking tours throughout the nation on as-needed basis.

Monitoring and Organizing—FSEEE is a vigilant watchdog over the successes and failures of the Forest Service. Our efforts to reform the agency require FSEEE to widely publicize examples such as disastrous timber policies and successful watershed restorations. FSEEE also facilitates communications between reformers within and outside the agency.

Protecting Integrity and Ethics - FSEEE is a screening and referral agency for Forest Service whistleblowers who risk their careers to protect our natural resources.

EIN

93-1162218

CFD Code

0314971

King County Charity Code

2529

Snohomish County/PUD Code

3050

Address

P.O. Box 11615
Eugene
OR
97440

Phone number

(541) 484-2692

Member login

 

Featured story

 
Right now, more than a million acres of old-growth forests in the Northwest are eligible for logging. FSEEE has developed an innovative strategy that will permanently protect the forests at risk, and at the same time, provide jobs for rural communities. But we need your help to save these irreplaceable old-growth forests. For almost two decades, the Northwest Forest Plan has provided the blueprint for the management of many of our nation’s oldest forests, including the ancient forests that survived the timber boom of the 20th century.
 
 
 

Mission

Our mission is to protect national forests and to reform the U.S. Forest Service by advocating environmental ethics, educating citizens, and defending whistleblowers.