The field organization of the Forest Service consists of regions, stations, and areas as described below:
(a) Regions of the National Forest System. For the purpose of managing the lands administered by the Forest Service, the United States is divided into nine geographic regions of the National Forest System. Each region has a headquarters office and is supervised by a Regional Forester who is responsible to the Chief for the activities assigned to that region. Within each region are located national forests and other lands of the Forest Service.
(1) National Forests. Each Forest has a headquarters office and is supervised by a Forest Supervisor who is responsible to the Regional Forester. Two or more proclaimed or designated National Forests, or all of the Forests in a State, may be combined into one Forest Service Administrative Unit headed by one Forest Supervisor. Each Forest is divided into Ranger Districts. The Alaska Region is composed of two National Forests without Ranger Districts; with one Forest divided into three areas, each administered by a Forest Supervisor.
(2) Ranger districts. Each district may include a portion of a national forest, a national grassland or portion thereof, a national recreation area, a wilderness or primitive area, and other lands administered by the Forest Service. Each district has a headquarters office and is supervised by a District Ranger (or Area Ranger in some cases) who is responsible to the Forest Supervisor.
(b) Forest and rangeland research coordination. The field research program is coordinated by six research stations, the national Forest Products Laboratory, and the International Institute of Tropical Forestry. Each has a headquarters office and a Director who is responsible to the Chief for all research activities within a geographical area of the United States or its territories. Scientists are based at Research Work Units with laboratories located in 36 lower States, Hawaii, Alaska, and Puerto Rico. Scientists primarily conduct their work within a given geographical area, but due to the integrated and cooperative nature of the research program, they make work nationwide and internationally.
(c) State and private forestry cooperation. Field level cooperation between the Forest Service, States, and the private sector on forestry activities is accomplished by the Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry for the Northeastern States; and by the National Forest Regional Offices in the Southeastern and Western States. The Northeastern Area is supervised by an Area Director who is responsible to the Chief for State and private forestry activities within the Area. Regional Foresters in Regions 1 through 8 and Region 10 are responsible for State and private forestry activities within those regions.
(d) International Institute of Tropical Forestry. The Institute is managed by a Director who is the senior Forest Service official in Puerto Rico. The Director is responsible to the Chief for planning and directing research, science and technology exchange, technical assistance to the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and international cooperation on natural resources concerning tropical forestry.
(e) Field addresses. The addresses of Regional Foresters, Station Directors, and Area Directors are given below. Under each Regional Office address is a list of National Forest Administrative Units by States with locations of Forest Supervisor headquarters. Headquarters locations for Ranger Districts, National Grasslands, and National Recreation Areas are not listed but may be obtained from Forest Supervisors or Regional Foresters.
National Forests by Region
State in which forest is located
National forest administration unit
Headquarters location of forest supervisor
Region 1, Northern Region (Regional Forester, Federal Bldg., P.O. Box 7669, Missoula, MT 59807):
Idaho
Clearwater
Orofino.
Idaho Panhandle National Forests (Kaniksu-Coeur 'dAlene-St. Joe
Coeur d'Alene.
Nezperce
Grangeville.
Montana
Beaverhead
Dillon.
Bitterroot
Hamilton.
Custer
Billings.
Deerlodge
Butte.
Flathead
Kalispell.
Gallatin
Bozeman.
Helena
Helena.
Kootenai
Libby.
Lewis and Clark
Great Falls.
Lolo
Missoula.
Region 2, Rocky Mountain Region (Regional Forester, 740 Simms Street, P. O. Box 25127, Lakewood, CO 80225):
Colorado
Arapaho-Roosevelt
Fort Collins.
Grand Mesa-Uncompahgre and Gunnison
Delta.
Pike-San Isabel
Pueblo.
San Juan-Rio Grande
Monte Vista.
White River
Glenwood Springs.
Nebraska
Nebraska (Samuel R. McKelvie)
Chadron.
South Dakota
Black Hills
Custer.
Wyoming
Bighorn
Sheridan.
Medicine Bow-Routt
Laramie.
Shoshone
Cody.
Region 3, Southwestern Region (Regional Forester, Federal Bldg., 517 Gold Ave. SW., Albuquerque, NM 87102):
Arizona
Apache-Sitgreaves
Springerville.
Coconino
Flagstaff.
Coronado
Tucson.
Kaibab
Williams.
Prescott
Prescott.
Tonto
Phoenix.
New Mexico
Carson
Taos.
Cibola
Albuquerque.
Gila
Silver City.
Lincoln
Alamogordo.
Santa Fe
Santa Fe.
Region 4, Intermountain Region (Regional Forester, 324 25th St., Ogden, UT 84401):
Idaho
Boise
Boise.
Caribou (Cache-Idaho portion)
Pocatello.
Challis
Challis.
Payette
McCall.
Salmon
Salmon.
Sawtooth
Twin Falls.
Targhee
St. Anthony.
Nevada
Humboldt
Elko.
Toiyabe, except the Lake Tahoe basin management unit
Sparks.
Utah
Ashley
Vernal.
Dixie
Cedar City.
Fishlake
Richfield.
Manti-La Sal
Price.
Uinta
Provo.
Wasatch (Cache-Utah portion)
Salt Lake City.
Wyoming
Bridger-Teton
Jackson.
Region 5, Pacific Southwest Region (Regional Forester, 630 Sansome St., San Francisco, CA 94111):
California
Angeles
Arcadia.
Cleveland
San Diego.
Eldorado, except the Lake Tahoe basin management unit
Placerville.
Inyo
Bishop.
Klamath
Yreka.
Lassen
Susanville.
Los Padres
Goleta.
Mendocino
Willows.
Modoc
Alturas.
Plumas
Quincy.
San Bernardino
San Bernardino.
Sequoia
Porterville.
Shasta-Trinity
Redding.
Sierra
Fresno.
Six Rivers
Eureka.
Stanislaus (Calaveras Bigtree)
Sonora.
Tahoe, except the Lake Tahoe basin management unit
Nevada City.
Lake Tahoe basin management unit (portions of Toiyabe, Eldorado, and Tahoe National Forests)
South Lake Tahoe (headed by an administrator).
Region 6, Pacific Northwest Region (Regional Forester, 333 S.W. 1st Avenue, P.O. Box 3623, Portland, OR 97208):
Oregon
Deschutes
Bend
Fremont
Lakeview.
Malheur
John Day.
Mount Hood
Gresham.
Ochoco
Prineville.
Rogue River
Medford.
Siskiyou
Grants Pass.
Siuslaw
Corvallis.
Umatilla
Pendleton.
Umpqua
Roseburg.
Wallowa-Whitman
Baker.
Willamette
Eugene.
Winema
Klamath Falls.
Washington
Colville
Colville.
Gifford Pinchot
Vancouver.
Mount Baker-Snoqualmie
Mountain Terrace.
Okanogan
Okanogan.
Olympic
Olympia.
Wenatchee
Wenatchee.
Region 8, Southern Region (Regional Forester, 1720 Peachtree Rd. NW., Atlanta, GA 30367):
Alabama
National forests in Alabama (William B. Bankhead, Conecuh, Talladega, Tuskegee)
Montgomery.
Arkansas
Ouachita
Hot Springs.
Ozark-St. Francis
Russellville.
Florida
National forests in Florida (Apalachicola, Ocala, Osceola)
Tallahassee.
Georgia
Chattahoochee-Oconee
Gainesville.
Kentucky
Daniel Boone
Winchester.
Louisiana
Kisatchie
Pineville.
Mississippi
National Forests in Mississippi (Bienville, Delta, De Soto, Holly Springs, Homochitto, Tombigbee)
Jackson.
North Carolina
National forests in North Carolina (Croatan, Nantahala, Pisgah, Uwharrie)
Asheville.
Puerto Rico
Caribbean
Rio Piedras, PR.
South Carolina
Francis Marion and Sumter
Columbia.
Tennessee
Cherokee
Cleveland.
Texas
National forests in Texas (Angelina, Davy Crockett, Sabine, Sam Houston)
Lufkin.
Virginia
George Washington-Jefferson
Roanoke.
Region 9, Eastern Region (Regional Forester, 310 West Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53203):
Illinois
Shawnee
Harrisburg.
Indiana and Ohio
Wayne-Hoosier
Bedford, IN.
Michigan
Hiawatha
Escanaba.
Huron-Manistee
Cadillac.
Ottawa
Ironwood.
Minnesota
Chippewa
Cass Lake.
Superior
Duluth.
Missouri
Mark Twain
Rolla.
New Hampshire and Maine
White Mountain
Laconia, NH.
Pennsylvania
Allegheny
Warren.
Vermont
Green Mountain
Rutland.
West Virginia
Monongahela
Elkins.
Wisconsin
Chequamegon
Park Falls.
Nicolet
Rhinelander.
Region 10, Alaska Region (Regional Forester, Federal Office Bldg., P.O. Box 21628, Juneau, AK 99802-1628):
Alaska
Chugach
Anchorage.
Tongass:
Chatham area
Sitka.
Ketchikan area
Ketchikan.
Sitkine area
Petersburg.
Forest and Range Experiment Stations, Laboratories, and Institutes Name of Unit and Headquarters of Director
North Central Research Station—1995 Folwell Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55108.
Northeastern Research Station—100 Matsonford Road, 5 Radnor Corporate Center, Suite 200, P.O. Box 6775, Radnor, PA 19087-4585.
Pacific Northwest Research Station—333 S.W. 1st Avenue, P.O. Box 3890, Portland, OR 97208-3890.
Pacific Southwest Research Station—800 Buchanan Street, West Building, Albany, CA 94710-0011.
Rocky Mountain Research Station—240 West Prospect Street, Fort Collins, CO 80526-2098.
Southern Research Station—200 Weaver Boulevard, P.O. Box 2680, Asheville, NC 28802.
Laboratory
Forest Products Laboratory—One Gifford Pinchot Drive, Madison, WI 53705-2398.
Institute
International Institute of Tropical Forestry—Call Box 25000, UPR Experimental Station Grounds, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico 00928-2500.
State and Private Forestry Area Office
Director, Northeastern Area—100 Matsonford Road, P.O. Box 6775, Radnor, PA 19087-4585.
Note:
In Regions 1 through 8 and 10, State and Private Forestry activities are directed from Regional headquarters.