Chattanooga Times Free Press

California, Nevada governors tour site of huge wildfire

- BY SAM METZ

GARDNERVIL­LE, Nev. — The governors of California and Nevada called for more federal firefighti­ng assistance Wednesday as they toured a region blackened by one of several massive wildfires that have destroyed dozens of homes in the West.

Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak and California Gov. Gavin Newsom stood on ashen ground as they surveyed burned homes and a mountain range of pine trees charred by the Tamarack Fire south of Gardnervil­le, Nevada, near Topaz Lake.

The Democrats called on the federal government to provide more firefighti­ng resources and stressed that climate change could make wildfires even more intense and destructiv­e.

Battling large-scale fires with limited resources, the U.S. Forest Service decided in early July to let dozens of lightning fires burn, including the Tamarack Fire.

Sisolak said more support and firefighte­rs would have prevented the U.S. Forest Service from having to make difficult decisions about where to direct its resources.

“We need help on the federal side. We need more people coming in. We need more resources. We need more air support. We need more boots on the ground,” Sisolak said.

Nevada firefighte­rs with the East Fork Fire Protection District told Newsom that each year fires are spreading earlier in the season due to hotter, drier weather.

The U.S. Forest Service manages the majority of wildfire-prone land in California. Newsom said the agency is understaff­ed, underfunde­d and needs major changes.

“We have a historic framework that has to be thrown out. You can’t look back a decade or two. The world is radically changing as the climate changes. You may not believe in science, you got it with your own damn eyes,” Newsom said, gesturing toward the blackened landscape.

A historic drought and recent heat waves tied to climate change have made wildfires harder to fight in the American West. Scientists say climate change has made the region much warmer and drier in the past 30 years and will continue to make weather more extreme and wildfires more frequent and destructiv­e.

Cooler weather and even rain helped the fight against some of the largest blazes this week but fire officials warned that hotter, drier weather was returning.

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