Meet Alex Etkind, Prescribed Fire Project Manager

December 12, 2025

As the Prescribed Fire Project Manager, I provide planning, coordination, and implementation of beneficial fire. Through my work with the Guild, I help people understand their fire management options, and I facilitate the essential role of prescribed fire in forest stewardship. My background in wildland fire and forestry includes work with private landowners, land trusts, government agencies, and Indigenous nations. I enjoy the challenge of working with a wide range of people to achieve shared goals and I am excited to join the Guild in its work to increase the capacity for prescribed fire across all lands in New Mexico.

Prior to joining the Guild, I was the Fire Ecologist for the Bureau of Indian Affairs – Southwest Region. In this role, I developed prescriptions for wildfire hazard reduction projects, led ignitions operations as a Firing Boss, and provided guidance as a Resource Advisor, ensuring that natural and cultural resources were protected during prescribed fires. After wildfires occurred, I monitored fire effects and evaluated the effectiveness of fuel treatments, incorporating this information to enable adaptive management.

Previous work as a forester and wildland firefighter with the New Mexico Forestry Division and as a project manager for the New Mexico Land Conservancy solidified my understanding of the challenges that lie ahead for the land and people of New Mexico. Additional experience as a consulting forester, wildland fire specialist, and prescribed fire contractor prepared me to facilitate partnerships between different stakeholder groups, set realistic expectations, and achieve meaningful outcomes. One of the most interesting things about being a prescribed fire contractor was learning from the wide range of people who use fire and beginning to understand the many different reasons why they burn. I learned that fire was not just a tool to be used for a single precise purpose, but also a restorative process with the potential to promote balance and abundance across entire landscapes.

Although I only recently joined the Guild, I have worked alongside Guild members and staff throughout my career. The steady presence of the Guild and its focus on both the land and people’s relationships with the land is what makes it unique. I feel grateful to work with an organization that provides the opportunity to combine my background in wildland fire, forestry, and ecology into on-the-ground land stewardship.

Recent Posts

By Aidan Juhl April 16, 2026
Written by Colleen Robinson
April 14, 2026
Written by Shannon Maes
April 14, 2026
In September 2025, the Guild launched a three-person Forest Stewards Apprenticeship (FSA) crew to work with the Penobscot Nation’s Department of Natural Resources (PN DNR). Over the course of their six-month season, apprentices Agenor Duhon, Gabe Stewart, and Jacob Baker shared a season of learning, collaboration, and hands-on stewardship of Penobscot Tribal lands.
April 14, 2026
This week, I stepped into the role of crew leader. We worked a full 40-hour week, splitting our time between Clifton Farms and a prescribed burn operation. On the first day in the field, we completed hack-and-squirt treatments on trees that had been marked the previous week. For the remainder of the week, we focused on marking trees for future hack-and-squirt work, maintaining a steady pace and ensuring accuracy in our selections.
April 7, 2026
As Guild members, our practice is fundamentally grounded in field observation. We know intuitively that forests are dynamic, living communities. Yet, for decades, the high-level systems used to value our work, specifically the carbon accounting ledgers tied to international frameworks like the Paris Agreement, have treated forests as static, quantifiable blocks of land. In a recent commentary published in One Earth, I argue that these legacy measurement, reporting, and verification (MRV) frameworks are failing. Ledger accounting relies on crude land-use delineations and outdated technology, effectively penalizing the natural, seasonal flux of the ecosystems we manage every day. By forcing landscapes into rigid “forest” versus “non-forest” binaries, such legacy systems miss the complex reality on the ground. But a major shift is underway.
March 18, 2026
Women have always been a part of forestry. Historically, women often helped guide family decisions about when to cut, which trees to save, and how best to steward their land for the next generation. Historical accounts from the Southern Appalachians describe women’s roles in decisions about timber harvesting and prioritizing long-term forest health. These often-uncredited contributions are even reflected in Aldo Leopold’s A Sand County Almanac (1949), in which describes his stewardship philosophy informed not only by his professional experience, but by shared responsibility, where the perspectives of his wife and daughters played an important role.
March 18, 2026
Although rural regions often host the highest concentrations of public and private forest land, they typically lack the sustainable workforce necessary for active management and stewardship. How do we address this foundational problem in forest conservation?
March 18, 2026
The Forest Stewards Guild has a unique dual mandate: practice and promote forest stewardship. Personally, I think the combination of practicing forest management and promoting best practices is what makes the Guild a vibrant and impactful organization.
February 17, 2026
We celebrate the remarkable career and legacy of Leslie (Les) Benedict, who has provided visionary leadership and dedicated service to the stewardship of forests, championing the preservation of the ecological and culturally important black ash. Benedict, a member of the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe in Akwesasne, north of the Adirondacks in upstate New York, recently retired after serving as the Assistant Director of the Tribe’s Environment Division for over 35 years.
February 17, 2026
The Forest Stewards Guild has been working to support the National Park Service on forest stewardship projects throughout the eastern U.S. This month we are in the midst of a project to protect mounds at Effigy Mounds National Monument near Harpers Ferry Iowa. This site was designated as a National Monument in 1949 and preserves over 200 mounds built between 800 and 2,500 years ago. Mounds at this site include conical, linear, compound, and effigy mounds – constructed in the shape of animals. Please see the National Park Service page for more information about the mounds, the people who built them, and how to visit the site. The lidar images on that website of the Marching Bears and other mound groups are fascinating.
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