A Quiet Shake-Up with Loud Consequences
Last week, something big happened quietly. The USDA and U.S. Forest Service laid off nearly 9,000 employees. These werenât middle managers or pencil-pushers. These were conservation planners, soil scientists, wildlife expertsâpeople whose daily work protects our farms, forests, and food systems. Itâs the kind of news that doesnât trend on Twitter but matters more than most headlines.
When Experience Walks Out the Door
These folks werenât just doing jobsâthey were carrying decades of field-tested knowledge. They know how to manage erosion before it ruins farmland, how to restore habitats without disrupting nearby communities, and how to fight wildfires with boots, brains, and a bulldozer. Replacing that kind of know-how isnât just toughâitâs nearly impossible overnight.
A Wake-Up Call for Government Consulting
For those of us in government consulting, this is a moment to pay close attention. Because when the government loses capacity like this, they donât stop doing the workâthey start outsourcing it. Thatâs where we come in. Whether your team specializes in environmental science, climate resilience, GIS, or IT support for federal programs, this shake-up signals a likely increase in contract opportunities.
Letâs Not Pretend Weâre Magic, Though
Still, letâs not kid ourselves. Government consulting can help fill gaps, but weâre not miracle workers. We canât download 25 years of forestry knowledge into a slide deck. What we can do is show up, stay ready, and deliver value with empathy and professionalism.
Where Thereâs Disruption, Thereâs Opportunity
This news is sobering, but itâs also motivating. In the middle of budget cuts and shifting priorities, thereâs still critical work to be done. And if youâre in government consulting, you might just be part of the solution.
The forests are still growing. The soil still shifts. The mission still matters.