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  • What the Forest Service Trails Crisis Means for TKO

    What the Forest Service Trails Crisis Means for TKO

    Closing a challenging year, TKO’s Executive Director Steve Kruger shares a critical report from the U.S. Forest Service.

    While TKO has seen significant financial support like never before from Oregon’s hikers, we are still shy of meeting our Willamette Week’s Give!Guide goal.

    GIVE NOW: TKO seeks to meet the moment in 2026.

    The Moment We’re In

    Internal reporting from the U.S. Forest Service Trail Program Status Report (Dec. 2025) confirms a reality TKO and our volunteers have been seeing completely changed with decisions by a new administration over the course of this year: trails across the country—and here in Oregon—are deteriorating rapidly due to severe staffing losses, stalled hiring, and compounding deferred maintenance.

    Some districts have lost up to 100% of trail staff, trail miles maintained are down 22%, and backcountry routes are being abandoned altogether. Even millions of dollars in federal trail grants have gone unused because agencies lack the staff capacity to administer projects.

    The Washington Post summarized the consequences bluntly, warning of “unpassable trails, unsafe bridges, and negative environmental impacts”
    as skilled trail workers leave and agencies struggle to keep up.

    And now with recent winter storms, Oregon’s trails and access to them are revealing a significant amount of damage due to flooding, surges of rain and water, rock/mud slides, and windblown, downed trees across local, state, and federal lands. The demand for help is high.


    What This Means for TKO: The Challenge

    • Rising demand, shrinking agency capacity: Land managers increasingly rely on TKO and volunteers to keep trails open, safe, and accessible—but without agency staff and coordination, approvals become harder.
    • Higher expectations for nonprofits: Communities expect trails to remain open even as federal capacity declines, placing more responsibility on organizations like TKO.
    • Risk of burnout—across systems: Just as agency staff face burnout, volunteers and nonprofit partners can be stretched thin without sustainable funding and support.

    What This Means for TKO: The Opportunity

    Even the Forest Service report makes one thing clear: partnerships matter more than ever—and TKO is well positioned to lead.

    TKO responds through community-powered stewardship:

    • Mobilizing trained volunteers: Thousands of volunteer hours annually help clear trails, repair tread, address drainage, and maintain access across Oregon’s national forests and public lands.
    • Providing technical trail expertise: As agencies lose skilled staff, TKO helps retain and grow technical trail skills—bridges, rock work, saw, and backcountry maintenance—within the nonprofit and volunteer sector.
    • Serving as a trusted partner: TKO helps land managers stretch limited capacity by coordinating crews, managing agreements, and delivering high-quality, on-the-ground results.
    • Building long-term resilience: By investing in volunteer leadership, training, and community ownership, TKO helps ensure trails remain cared for even in uncertain funding climates.

    Bottom Line

    This moment serves as a warning—and a call.

    It also confirms with a striking amount of heart, Federal agencies cannot do this work alone. Volunteers cannot replace staff. But together, with the right support, partnerships can stabilize trail systems and protect public access.

    For TKO, this is both a challenge and a responsibility—and an opportunity to deepen our role as a steward, connector, and leader for Oregon’s trails.

    The need is growing, GIVE NOW! TKO’s service to Oregon’s hiking community is urgent. And the path forward depends on sustained community investment.

    Steve Kruger
    Executive Director | Trailkeepers of Oregon

    TKO’s Board, staff, and lead volunteers met in Cascade Locks during the annual TKO Leadership Summit to engage, learn, and motivate our strategic plans in March 2025. Photo by Dan Sharp

    Steve Kruger

    December 29, 2025
    News, Uncategorized
  • Blog Series, Trailkeepers High-Fives: Thanking the hands and hearts behind Oregon’s trails 

    Blog Series, Trailkeepers High-Fives: Thanking the hands and hearts behind Oregon’s trails 

    Subject: Federal Agency Staff

    Dear friends and colleagues at the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and all other federal agency teams who care for our public lands,

    On behalf of Trailkeepers of Oregon—and on behalf of every hiker, volunteer, trail enthusiast, gateway-community resident and landscape lover in Oregon—I want to extend our profound thanks for the sheer grit, dedication, and perseverance you’ve shown during what became the longest federal government shutdown in U.S. history. As the government warms back up, there are still vacant chairs, stored tools and chainsaws, and empty trucks at the duty station. Our public lands are still in crisis from the reduction in force, structural changes, and policies under attack over this year and it is upending our expectations for the protections of these special places. 

    July 2025 at Wahclella Falls, USFS and TKO kicking off a sustainable trails planning effort that is in jeopardy now. Photo credit: TKO

    As we’ve met with agency teammates in the last week to get going again, we have to take a moment and recognize that you all are still shook–from the shutdown and all that you’re dealing with prior. We know that many of you were furloughed, others were called back intermittently, most were asked to perform jobs or tasks beyond the usual—just so that public lands, trails, restrooms, trailheads, access points, and safety essential functions could keep moving forward. All of it was tough, we know you were doing the best you could. Worst of all, you did this while still uncertain if or when you will get back-paid for the time you did work.

    From our Update on Potential Federal Shutdown post, we highlighted how:

    “Every day lost isn’t just a paycheck deferred—it’s a backlog growing heavier. Trash piles up at trailheads, trail maintenance slips further behind, and rehabilitation projects are pushed off indefinitely.”

    And our TKO Update 10/14/2025: When the Rules Change… post noted that:

    “The perception is that everything is just fine… but the toll on the remaining staff on duty is high and we are not taking the long view in planning for the protection and enhancement of Oregon’s trails.”

    You – the agency folks who were ordered to work and stay on the line, picked up pieces, held things together, and who are now facing the enormous challenge of catching up while the backlog looms – you deserve recognition, support and more than a simple “thanks.”

    Here are a few things I hope you know:

    1. We see you. We see the long hours, the impossible choices, the extra tasks, and the uncertainty. You showed up anyway, and it means everything.

    2. We’re in this with you. We are not “back to normal.” The backlog is real and the strain is real. TKO will be there—with volunteers, tools, and support—to help shoulder the load.

    3. Oregon’s hiking community is grateful. Your work keeps families, newcomers, and lifelong hikers connected to the places they love. That matters more than most people realize.

    4. It’s okay to say this is hard. You’ve been navigating shifting rules, delayed pay, safety concerns, and an avalanche of deferred work. You don’t have to pretend it’s fine.

    5. If you’re willing—help us share your story. Let us know what our public lands need and where the pressure points are. When the public understands the full picture, they show up. And we’ll help make sure your reality is heard.

    And to every hiker, volunteer, trail enthusiast, gateway-community resident, and landscape lover in Oregon reading this: Listen closely to what these agency teams are carrying. Stay patient. Stay kind. And be ready to step up and give back—because the wellbeing of our public lands depends on all of us showing up together.

    In closing: Thank you. From the bottom of our boots, from the entirety of the TKO team, from Oregon’s hiking community — thank you for carrying the load during a moment when the system bent under pressure and when your personal lives were disrupted. We remain grateful, and we stand ready to help lighten the load.

    With profound respect and partnership,

    Executive Director
    Trailkeepers of Oregon

    P.S. Oregon’s trails may be open, hikers may be smiling, but the work isn’t done—far from it. So if you see someone at a trailhead and you’re still catching up behind the scenes: you’re the reason they’re there at all.

    2022 Oregon Outdoor Recreation Summit, TKO + FS Trail Party & Trillium Lake Boardwalk tour. Photo credit Dan Sharp

    Steve Kruger

    November 21, 2025
    News
  • TKO on the Trail: Reflections from the 2025 Oregon Trails Coalition Summit in Pendleton

    November 6–8, 2025: Pendleton, Oregon

    Trailkeepers of Oregon (TKO) was proud to join partners from across the state for the 2025 Oregon Trails Coalition (OTC) Summit in Pendleton. As a sponsor, planning partner, and session leader, our staff, board, and lead volunteers helped shape an inspiring few days that celebrated collaboration, learning, and the shared stewardship of Oregon’s trails.


    Gathering Partners in Uncertain Times

    The Summit opened with a Federal Stewardship Partners Mini-Summit at the Tamástslikt Cultural Institute, bringing together nonprofit and tourism collaborators for informal updates and scenario planning amid ongoing federal funding uncertainty. Before the full Summit kicked off, TKO joined partners for a Federal Stewardship Partners Mini-Summit at the Tamástslikt Cultural Institute, where participants strengthened collaboration amid the uncertainty of the ongoing federal shutdown.

    Highlights included:

    • Partner updates and discussion on current challenges in volunteer-powered stewardship.
    • A shared federal update and training with Guides & Outfitters.
    • Networking lunch hosted by Travel Oregon, fostering candid peer exchange.
    • Strategy session on scenario planning and future partnership models.
    • Exploration of cost-share and Good Neighbor Authority opportunities.
    • A visit to the Tamástslikt exhibits, honoring the region’s deep cultural and ecological roots.

    Tamástslikt Cultural Institute offered participants of the mini-summit free access to the museum, broadening our awareness of the families, bands, and tribes of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla. This message on display was of significant relevance to the annual gathering of the Oregon Outdoor Recreation Summit.

    Even with agency participation limited by furloughs, the mini-summit underscored the strength of Oregon’s trail network resilient: strong relationships, creative partnerships, and a deep bench of dedicated volunteers and organizations ready to adapt.


    The Main Summit: Collaboration in Action

    Over the following three days, the Oregon Outdoor Recreation Summit convened hundreds of leaders—trail organizations, land managers, tribal representatives, local governments, and advocates—to explore how Oregon’s trail systems can better serve people, communities, and the environment.

    Core Themes That Resonated

    1. Equity and Inclusion in the Outdoors – Sessions explored how to remove barriers and build welcoming environments on and off the trail.
    2. Resilience in Stewardship – Participants shared adaptive strategies for working within changing federal and state frameworks while sustaining volunteer power.
    3. Economic and Community Vitality – Trails were highlighted as drivers for rural prosperity, cultural connection, and public health.
    4. Shared Leadership Across Sectors – The Summit emphasized distributed leadership and durable partnerships among nonprofits, agencies, and local communities.

    TKO Highlights: Sharing our Impacts

    TKO team members played key roles throughout:

    • Breakout Leadership: Staff and volunteers co-facilitated sessions on volunteer leadership development, inclusive access, and sustainable maintenance systems.
    • Strategic Conversations: TKO’s executive and board leaders joined discussions on shared stewardship models, statewide funding strategies, and collaboration with rural and tribal communities.
    • Hands-On Field Work: Volunteers rolled up their sleeves for Pendleton-area trail projects, linking the Summit’s big ideas directly to on-the-ground action.

    Jessica Carrillo Alatorre, TKO Incoming Board President, was an OORS planning member and volunteered to write the Community Agreements, making sure that during very derisive political atmospheres across the country, all the participants at the summit felt welcome, safe, and supportive.

    Matt Ruddy, TKO Program Director, hosted a number things, sharing the Accessibility survey criteria from Access Recreation along the Pendleton River Walk trail right in town, co-hosting a BIPOC Nature Network Affinity Lunch, and on a panel for the Love Is King, Freedom to Roam project he was a part of.

    Noelle Windesheim, TKO Central Coast Stewardship Coordinator, Tidepools to Trails events with Cape Perpetua Collaborative, she presented on her the partnership to bring volunteers to the stunning central Oregon Coast for an unforgettable day of tidepool exploration and trail stewardship.

    Steve Kruger, TKO Executive Director, was offered to help co-lead a Federal partners group to shape the future of any statewide funding agreements. He also moderated a breakout session on OSU’s Recreative Recovery program on wildfire recovery and co-hosted a post-summit trail party with the Blue Mountain land Trust Blues Crew.

    15 TKO staff, Board, and lead volunteers represented at the Summit, volunteering at the welcome table, Office Hours breakout session, and networked with dozens of folks across agencies, tourism, partners, and many other outdoor recreation professionals.


    Looking Ahead: Applying the Learnings

    The energy and ideas from Pendleton are already informing TKO’s 2026 priorities:

    • Grow and Sustain Volunteer Power through improved training, leadership pipelines, and recognition.
    • Strengthen Structures and Culture to balance capacity and care within our capable organizations, strained agencies, and growing needs for Oregon’s trails and outdoor places.
    • Championing Resilience for Oregon’s Outdoors by aligning partnerships, funding, and field operations for long-term sustainability.

    Together, these commitments reflect what we heard loud and clear in Pendleton: Oregon’s trails thrive when collaboration is intentional, inclusive, and community-driven. And 2026’s Oregon Outdoor Recreation Summit location and dates were announced – OORS is heading to Ashland October 22-24, 2026!


    Gratitude

    Thank you to the Oregon Trails Coalition, Travel Oregon, Tamástslikt Cultural Institute, and all the sponsors, partners, and participants who made the 2025 Summit a success. And special thanks to the TKO staff, board, and volunteer leaders who showed up with curiosity, expertise, and dedication—continuing our mission to protect and enhance the Oregon hiking experience.

    We’re returning from Pendleton re-energized and ready for the work ahead—on the trail, in our communities, and alongside the partners who make it all possible.

    TKO staff, Board, and lead volunteers bringing the fun at the Oregon Outdoor Recreation Summit! Photo by Dan Sharp.

    Steve Kruger

    November 12, 2025
    News, Uncategorized
    Advocacy
  • TKO Update 10/14/2025: When the Rules Change, Volunteer Stewardship During a Federal Shutdown

    Message from Steve Kruger, Executive Director, Trailkeepers of Oregon

    Trailkeepers of Oregon (TKO) shares an update on the 2025 federal shutdown and new Forest Service guidance that allows certain volunteer trail work to continue — a first in TKO’s partnership history with the Forest Service. Learn how this confusing moment is also an opportunity for shared stewardship. 

    TKO is moving forward with a case-by-case approach to volunteer activities during the ongoing federal government shutdown.

    This means that while most TKO projects on National Forest lands will remain on pause, a limited number may continue only where we have clear, written approval from local Forest Service contacts and safety coverage is confirmed. At the same time, we are ramping up projects on State Parks and local public lands to ensure our volunteers can keep caring for Oregon’s trails safely and responsibly.

    Our decisions are guided by TKO’s values of safety, stewardship, and partnership. We know some partner organizations are taking different paths, and as federal guidance evolves, we may adjust our approach. For now, this plan allows TKO to continue making progress while prioritizing volunteer safety and long-term trust with our agency partners.

    Thank you for your patience and flexibility while we navigate this.


    Shutdown or not, Oregon’s trails deserve care — but how we care for them matters. For the first time since TKO became a nonprofit partner of the U.S. Forest Service in 2007, there is new guidance that volunteers would be allowed to continue some trail work during a federal government shutdown.

    That’s a big shift. In every past shutdown, all volunteer activities on federal lands were halted. This year, new federal guidance permits certain pre-funded partnerships and projects to move forward — creating both confusion and opportunity.


    Why This Moment Is Confusing

    The official Forest Service “Lapse in Appropriations” guidance, released October 3rd, and clarified further on October 8th, allows work tied to existing agreements to continue. Lines between essential, pre-approved, and externally funded projects are blurry, leaving partners like TKO to interpret changing rules in real time. Clarification on October 8th is confirming that those agreements to support cooperative partners will be honored. With many of the agency staff we typically communicate with furloughed, we are working to verify oversight to keep volunteers safe and reimbursements for services continuing without delay.

    “We’re in uncharted territory. Our goal is to keep volunteers safe and our organization supported.”


    Why It’s Also an Opportunity

    This situation underscores what makes the TKO community special — the ability to step up for Oregon’s trails when they need it most.

    • Self-reliance and shared stewardship: Communities caring for public lands show resilience and ownership of natural resources.
    • Cost efficiency: Volunteer service activities can keep some essential maintenance happening and support visitors.
    • Continuity of access: Keeping trails open supports public health, wellness, and outdoor connection.
    • Support for local economies: Maintained trails help sustain nearby small businesses and rural tourism.

    “When public systems pause, community action can keep Oregon’s hiking experience alive.”


    Why Caution Still Matters

    Even as we see opportunity, there are serious considerations:

    • Filling gaps too effectively could reduce public awareness of how disruptive shutdowns are for land management and agency staff. 
    • Public perception may portray that everything is just fine with toilet paper rolls being replaced by a skeleton crew of agency staff and trails cleared by volunteers, continuing volunteer work can blur the line between community service and replacing furloughed staff. 
    • Safety, liability, and reimbursement for organizations are uncertain, with approvals going to the email addresses of staff we know to be furloughed.
    • Annual work planning and long term trail system improvements are being ignored out of an urgency to keep facilities clean and trails safe, losing ground on enhancing the Oregon hiking experience.

    Finding Balance

    TKO’s approach will be measured and transparent. We’ll continue work that is clearly permitted and safe, while pausing projects where direction remains unclear. We’ll share updates as federal guidance evolves and keep our volunteers and partners informed every step of the way.

    This is a moment to show that shared stewardship is more than words — it’s a community value that persists even in uncertainty.

    “The Oregon hiking experience depends on all of us — caring, cautiously, and together.”


    Call to Action: How You Can Help

    • Stay flexible: Trail projects may change with little notice — check the TKO volunteer calendar for updates and monitor your email for changes to trail parties you’ve signed up for.
    • Stay informed: Read our previous post, Update on Potential Federal Shutdown, for context on what TKO expected and USDA Forest Service Updated Partnership Guidance, for where we are now.
    • Stay concerned: The perception is that everything is just fine, toilet paper rolls are full and immediate trail repairs might be fixed, but the toll on the remaining staff on duty is high and we are not taking the long view in planning for the protection and enhancement of Oregon’s trails.
    • Stay engaged: Support our mission to protect and enhance Oregon’s hiking experience by donating or volunteering when projects resume in full.

    Together, we’re proving that Oregon’s trail community is resilient — even when the path forward isn’t perfectly clear.

    Steve Kruger

    October 14, 2025
    Advocacy, News, Uncategorized
    Advocacy, Press
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Trailkeepers of Oregon
P.O. Box 14814
Portland, OR 97293
(971) 206-4351