From my understanding, and searching within the text of the first link, Forestry and Fire Dept vehicles were NOT affected by Obama's executive order. A ctrl+F search through it with the keyword "fire" and forestry", no results were returned relating to Fire Dept use or Forestry Service. The executive order only affected LEO agencies. That is why while armored M113s and variants were rounded up by TACOM, M548s used by Forestry continued to be used. As for release, ARMORED vehicles like M113 variants have not been released from PDs or LEOs in atleast 15 years (legally with paperwork), UNARMORED vehicles like M548s have been sold off as recently as last year by the State of Louisiana with full government release paperwork
You are correct, Sir.
However, as is often the case, the stipulation recalling "tracked vehicles" was applied by the former administration beyond the scope of the Executive Order. A very broad brush was used in applying the recall of ALL DOD 1033 equipment, even beyond the specified LE community. Somehow in the precipitated "RULES" implementing the Executive Order they arbitrarily "forgot" the "armored" part of the TRACKED VEHICLE description and went only with the descriptive "tracked system instead of wheels". Ultimately, this larger user umbrella covered ALL recipients regardless of whether they were Law Enforcement or something else, what program provided said equipment, AND they scooped up ALL Tracked Vehicles whether armored or not.
This broad mis-interpretation by some would say "overzealous gun-grabbing officials" was the proverbial straw that broke the back of the prior administration's EO, and thus the catalyst that spawned the current administrations rescinding of the former EO by issuing the latter EO. The easiest way to clean up the far-reaching propagated "RULES" was to remove all the teeth from, and in fact kill the prior administration's EO that birthed the mess in the first place.
Some of the areas overly applied in the field can be found in that original link's references:
1. Page 8: CONTROLLED EQUIPMENT
2. Page 11: DOD 1033 PROGRAM
3. Page 12: "TRACKED ARMORED VEHICLES" and "...tracked system instead of wheels."
Additionally, for any entity that wanted to KEEP any tracked vehicles or other equipment previously issued Page 15 places the BURDEN ON THE USER TO JUSTIFY why they want to keep a prohibited item, how it would be used, and then submit their request for approval. Simply, that was too much for the users to have to swallow. They could tell that the feds were writing the rules and acting as judge and jury so they - including the Texas Forest Service - simply rolled over and began surrendering their hardware. They chose not to fight that fight - a fight that just could not be won.
It should also be noted that some entities cowered so readily that they even surrendered tracked bulldozers, ditch-witches, and snow machines just to avoid the "justification paperwork" they were told they'd have to submit. The threat of invoking federal penalties was used to intimidate and manipulate State and Local users beyond the Executive Order's scope of authority.
Yes, most of this was beyond Constitutional Authority and/or Executive Privilege to rule by the signing of Orders.
Yes, governmental subordinates exercised what is known as "over-reach" far beyond the verbiage of the Executive Order they claimed authority under to achieve an agenda to which they subscribed.
No, checks and balances within our system DID NOT trigger appropriate actions... at least not until the administrations changed and a fresh corrective Executive Order was issued.
These are the indisputable facts. Nothing here is to be interpreted as "political", but as statements on the historical operations of governance only.
We know two things about the TRUTH:
1. The truth is going to hurt.
2. The truth shall make you free.