Huber-Stearns, HeidiSanto, AnnaDavis, Emily JaneMoseley, CassandraEllison, Autumn2019-01-082019-01-082018https://hdl.handle.net/1794/241622 pagesIn January 2013, the Pacific Northwest Region of the Forest Service initiated the Eastside Restoration Strategy to improve forest health conditions by accelerating the pace and scale of restoration on national forests in eastern Oregon and Washington. As part of this effort, the Region created a dedicated interdisciplinary (ID) Blue Mountains Restoration Strategy team to conduct landscape-level planning across three national forests and innovate strategies to more effectively reach planning decisions. The team worked on two NEPA processes: a 100,000-acre project on one forest, and 600,000 acres of dry forest restoration activities across three forests. In 2016, the Forest Service requested a review to identify transferrable insights from the project.en-USCreative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-USForest resilienceForest restorationForest healthUnited States. Forest ServiceUnited States. Forest Service. Pacific Northwest RegionBlue Mountains (Or. and Wash.)Lessons learned from the Blue Mountains restoration strategy teamOther