Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 84— - HEALTHY FOREST RESTORATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - MISCELLANEOUS › § 6592
Provides $3,369,200,000 for fiscal years 2022 through 2026 to reduce wildfire risk. The Interior and Agriculture Departments, through the Forest Service Chief, must treat and improve the fire condition of 10,000,000 acres of Federal or Tribal forest or rangeland with very high wildfire hazard by September 30, 2027. Much of the money is split into specific programs and amounts, including: $20,000,000 for satellite fire detection ($10,000,000 each to Interior and Agriculture); $600,000,000 for wildland firefighter pay ($120,000,000 Interior, $480,000,000 Agriculture); $10,000,000 for team radio technology; $30,000,000 for Reverse-911 systems; $50,000,000 for local slip-on tanker units; $1,200,000 for maps of at-risk communities; $100,000,000 for preplanning and training ($50,000,000 each); $20,000,000 for a Southwest restoration data program; $20,000,000 for the Joint Fire Science Program ($10,000,000 each); $100,000,000 for collaborative landscape projects; $500,000,000 for mechanical thinning ($100,000,000 Interior, $400,000,000 Agriculture); $500,000,000 for community wildfire defense grants; $500,000,000 for prescribed burning ($250,000,000 each); $500,000,000 for improving control locations ($250,000,000 each); $200,000,000 for crews that remove flammable vegetation ($100,000,000 each); $200,000,000 for post-fire restoration ($100,000,000 each); $8,000,000 for firewood banks; and $10,000,000 for sensors and real-time monitoring equipment. The agencies must also set up a new “wildland firefighter” job category within 180 days after November 15, 2021, convert at least 1,000 seasonal firefighters to full-time jobs that cut hazardous fuels at least 800 hours a year, and offer pay boosts in hard-to-staff areas. By October 1, 2022, the agencies must make firefighter health and safety plans, including mental health care. The Agriculture Secretary will run and fund collaborative forest projects and a separate community grant program that gives up to $250,000 for plans and up to $10,000,000 for projects, usually with required non‑Federal cost shares (10% or 25%, with waivers for underserved communities), and some roof-safety rules for continental U.S. communities. Projects must be prioritized where NEPA reviews were finished by November 15, 2021, keep large trees when appropriate, avoid permanent roads, and restore old-growth properly. The agencies must report each year on acres improved, study fuelbreak systems in western States within 180 days after November 15, 2021, and make multi-year and long-term treatment and monitoring plans on set timelines. Projects under certain funding lines count as authorized hazardous fuel reduction work.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 6592
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73