When the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service designated over 300,000 acres as “critical habitat” for the black pine snake—with limited scientific evidence—private landowners pushed back. In this episode, host Michelle Cain talks with Gray Skipper, a landowner directly impacted, and Charles Yates from Pacific Legal Foundation, about how this case became a major legal victory for property rights and what it means for the future of land management across America’s forests.
The Okefenokee Swamp is one of America’s most treasured wetlands—but the debate over mining on its edge is about more than conservation headlines. It’s about private property rights, rural livelihoods, and the families who have stewarded this land for generations. In this episode, host Michelle Cain sits down with Joe Hopkins of Toledo Manufacturing, a multigenerational forest company managing land near the swamp for over a century. From wildfire battles and timber markets to the tensions between environmental advocacy and local realities, Joe offers a rare, ground-level perspective on what it means to be a forest landowner in the shadow of the Okefenokee.
Join your host Michelle Cain and FLA's Vice President of Government Affairs, Craig Anderson, as they talk through the best ways to engage with your members of Congress and why that's important as a private forest landowner in the U.S.
A special panel episode from the Forest Landowners Association NationalConference.
In our first episode, FLA's CEO, Scott Jones, moderates a panel entitled Expanding Market Opportunities.
Join Stacey Newstead from CarbonScape, Carrie Annand from American Biomass Energy Power Association, Rank Peeples with Peeples Industries, and Matt White with Drax Group US as they discuss expanding and emerging markets for private forest landowners.