An advocacy group is gravely concerned about forced exits of hundreds of rangers, interpreters, and administrative staff in U.S. national parks.
At least 50 jobs are being restored to help maintain and clean parks, educate visitors and collect admission fees.
Thousands of federal government employees have been shown the door in the first month of President Donald Trump's administration as the White House and its Department of Government Efficiency fire ...
Trump’s hiring freeze could fling this owl toward extinction, environmental group warns - The northern spotted owl is already ...
Over 100 protesters, including a large portion of veterans, rallied in downtown Asheville Feb. 21 against Trump's purge of ...
JOSHUA TREE NATIONAL PARK — Six Joshua Tree National Park workers were among more than 10,000 federal employees fired in the ...
This week, a memo from the Department of Interior to park service officials said the agency could hire 7,700 seasonal ...
Significant cuts to the federal workforce have created uncertainty around staffing levels at national parks in Montana. MTPR’s John Hooks shares the latest with host Elinor Smith.
The Trump administration's mass firing of probationary employees raises red flags for those working in Arizona's federal ...
When unemployed marine biologist Lanny Flaherty poked his head into the ranger's station at the Wallowa Whitman National Forest in the Pacific Northwest and asked to be a volunteer, he said it put him ...
The Department of the Interior is terminating 1,000 full-time National Park Service employees, according to an advocacy group that calls the job cuts “reckless,” as reported by Travel Weekly. The ...