As DOGE Destroys $1.2 Trillion Industry, Rural Trump Voters and Tourists Pay the Price

Terry Zink has spent his entire life in the woods.

A 57-year-old, third-generation hound from Marion, Montana—a town tucked away in the Flathead National Forest—Zink hunts mountain lions and bears while running a small archery business.

He also voted for Trump, but after the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) implemented deep cuts to the federal agencies that manage America’s public lands in 2025, Zink is openly second-guessing his vote.

“You won’t meet anyone more conservative than me, and I didn’t vote for it,” Zink told Politico (1). “You can’t lay off our firefighters. You can’t lay off our trail crews. You have to have selective logging, water restoration and healthy forests.”

In Montana, the impact is already being felt. Hunters are heading to overlapping trails, ranchers are looking at freezes on funding for drought resilience and wildfire mitigation, and outfitters and guides — who brought in an estimated $314 million to Montana in 2024 — are facing staff cuts that have hurt their businesses.

And this isn’t just happening in Montana.

Versions of this scenario are playing out in the West, with real consequences for rural jobs, small businesses, and the cost of hunting and fishing on public lands.

Since the beginning of 2024, the federal workforce managing America’s public lands has shrunk by about 20%, falling from 79,070 employees to 63,141 by September 2025, according to the Center for American Progress (2).

The cuts hit these specific agencies the hardest (3):

  • US Forest Service: About 3,400 jobs cut

  • National Park Service: About 1,000 jobs cut

  • Land Administration Office: About 800 jobs cut

About 97% of Bureau of Land Management employees work outside of DC, often in remote small towns where federal agencies are among the largest employers (4). When lifeguard stations close or seasonal crews disappear, the economic fallout can spill over to local gas stations, restaurants and diners, as well as hotels and motels.

According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, outdoor recreation generated $1.2 trillion in economic output in 2023, accounted for 2.3% of US GDP, and supported five million jobs (5). States like Montana, Alaska, Vermont and Hawaii rely on outdoor recreation at twice the national average. In Montana alone, the sector pumped $3.4 billion into the state economy in 2023 (6).

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