New USFS District Ranger Named

For Immediate Release

November 17, 2022

Media Contact: Andrew Madsen
(805) 895-0841
andrew.madsen@usda.gov

http://www.facebook.com/lpnf

Twitter: @LosPadresNF

Fin Eifert named new Monterey District Ranger

U.S. Forest Service officials announced the selection of John “Fin” Eifert as the new District Ranger for Los Padres National Forest’s Monterey Ranger District. Eifert has served as the Natural Resource Officer on the Monterey Ranger District since October 2018. He succeeds Tim Short, who transferred to become District Ranger of the Ojai Ranger District.

Eifert began his federal land management career as a field technician with the Bureau of Land Management in western Colorado before joining the U.S. Forest Service in 2014 as a range technician on the Grand River Ranger District of the Dakota Prairie Grasslands in North and South Dakota. Following that assignment, he transitioned to the Klamath National Forest’s Goosenest Ranger District where he served as Range Management Specialist until coming to Los Padres.

In his previous positions, Eifert gained valuable experience navigating complex public land management issues by exploring new ways to lead, organize, innovate, and interact to bring about the solutions we collectively need. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Rangeland Ecology and Management from Colorado State University, and his Master’s degree in organizational leadership from Norwich University in 2018. Eifert is pursuing his Ph.D., focusing on better understanding how Forest Service leaders can effectively navigate rising complexity in modern public land management work environments.

A native of Washington, Eifert is an avid supporter of the Seattle Mariners and Seahawks. In his spare time he enjoys the art of cooking, attending live music events, and riding his bicycle

“I am honored to be named Monterey District Ranger and am eager to work shoulder-to-shoulder with the dedicated district employees and amazing stakeholders to find meaningful solutions to the challenges that lay before us,” Eifert said. 

Eifert will assume his new duties effective December 5.

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Veterans Day, 2022

This is what I wrote in 2018, 4 years ago, after another election. It is just as true today, even more so, after this latest election. I am again hopeful .

A partial repeat: In 1967, the Summer of Love was over. Viet Nam protests were barely beginning, and I found myself without a place to live, and had quit a job with an abusive boss. I did not know what to do, and so I joined the USWACs. The Army was segregated in those days — not by race, but by sex. All WAC training was held at Ft. McClellan, AL and so the Army flew me out to begin my training. It was in Alabama, in 1967 that I first observed racial segregation. I saw “whites-only” bathrooms and water faucets. They were NOT just a “left-over” relic from an earlier and sad time. They were a commentary on how far we still had to come, and have come. Racial segregation, at least not overt, was minimal in California. It was still rampant in Alabama when I was there.

In 1968 I was stationed at Ft. Huachuca, AZ at the Combat Surveillance School/Training Center Headquarters. (Spook School) I was on my way home to California when an automobile accident almost took my life, and did take my leg.

I ended up at the Veteran’s Hospital in West LA, associated with UCLA medical center. The medical care there was the best available. What wasn’t the best, was how they treated women veterans. We were a rarity, and the VA was not set up to deal with us.

There were no changing rooms for physical therapy for women vets, and I was the only one in the program. They had me use a broom closet. Of the over 400 bed hospital, only 16 were for women, and we had a separate open ward.

In 2018, more women have been elected to state and federal offices than ever before in history and more people of color are fulfilling their dreams of public service. There was both a blue wave and an estrogen wave. In my lifetime, women have traversed a difficult path with determination and with grace. We are making a difference.

I(n 2022, women were motivated by the USSC’s overturning of Roe v Wade to vote, to run for office, and to win. Some states, like California, have now included women’s bodily autonomy into our state constitution. Women’s choices over their own bodies are now protected in some states. There is an underground movement to support and facilitate “camping” by women coming from a repressive state to a progressive state for health care. It is part of social media, now. I have been a witness to this movement.

…This past Tuesday, there WAS a shift in the American conscience. We achieved so much and overcame much of the hatred and racism which had infected some of our leaders. We told them, NO MORE. I could not be prouder of us and how we are taking back our democracy from those who have been trying to destroy it for the last couple years. We are a nation that is inclusive, not devisive. We are becoming stronger than ever before. America is powerful because of our diversity. Let us celebrate how much stronger our love is than the hate. Blessings to all our veterans and those who support them.

This is one of the comments on that post from 2018 that is another important reminder that I’d like to include here:

CONSTANCE NAGI, MD (SAN DIEGO) EditThank you, ‘Big Sur Kate’ , for being a ‘Call to Change’ … {and not a ‘Call to Arms…’}I too served … in the US Navy Medical Corps, starting ‘Active Duty’ in San Siego in 1978, when women were still not allowed on Navy Ships … My starting Medical School Class at U of Florida in 1973 was only @ 7% women (in my ‘Interview’ I was asked by a PhD ‘male Professor’ – ‘What would I do if I got pregnant during Medical School?’) … Now @ half of most Med School Classes are women … AND there are now women Navy Admirals! (I myself am ‘USN, Captain, Retired… ), managing to ‘traverse’ those early ‘murky Professional Waters…’ in both Medicine AND the Military…Thank you for YOUR Service … both in the US Army ‘WACS’ … and for your BigSurKate Blog…! Read & loved by many of us …

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Is it Fall or Winter?

Yesterday, I lost my power and my internet. The power, since it is self-supplied, I managed to get back in a few hours of wrestling with the hurricane while I located the storm-caused problem.. The internet was off from 4 am until 6 pm…both Starlink AND Excede/Via Sat. It was excede I got back online at 6 pm. I spent the rest of the day basically trying to stay warm and reading. Today seems to be back to a normal fall, but look for freezing temps to return Thursday and Friday night.

These gorgeous photos from Yosemite came to me via today’s California Sun.https://www.californiasun.co/newsletter/a-second-term-for-gavin-newsom-winter-and-fall-overlap-in-yosemite/