
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
When we talk about forestry jobs in Oregon, you might automatically think of logging. But there are countless other roles in the industry, including planting trees after a forested area has been clear cut to thinning the understory for wildfire management. As recently reported by Jefferson Public Radio, that workforce has evolved from worker cooperatives of the late 1960s to largely immigrant contractors, known as “pineros,” which we see today.
JPR reporter Justin Higginbottom joins us to talk more about his deep dive into this side of the forestry industry and how it’s changed over the last 50 years.
4.5
268268 ratings
When we talk about forestry jobs in Oregon, you might automatically think of logging. But there are countless other roles in the industry, including planting trees after a forested area has been clear cut to thinning the understory for wildfire management. As recently reported by Jefferson Public Radio, that workforce has evolved from worker cooperatives of the late 1960s to largely immigrant contractors, known as “pineros,” which we see today.
JPR reporter Justin Higginbottom joins us to talk more about his deep dive into this side of the forestry industry and how it’s changed over the last 50 years.
6,133 Listeners
9,166 Listeners
3,902 Listeners
90,949 Listeners
38,189 Listeners
1,019 Listeners
25 Listeners
43,483 Listeners
6,691 Listeners
223 Listeners
14,548 Listeners
134 Listeners
4,624 Listeners
4 Listeners
4,206 Listeners
16,068 Listeners
977 Listeners
15,335 Listeners
216 Listeners
1,471 Listeners
180 Listeners