Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Conditions in Arizona indicate greater risk for wildfires

- By Paul Davenport

PHOENIX — Officials say conditions in Arizona this year point toward a potential for high wildfire activity in the central part of the state and southward into desert areas where moist conditions during the winter and early spring promoted growth of grasses.

The state Department of Forestry and Fire Management said that outlook is based on conditions similar to those of 2019 when 1,827 wildland fires burned nearly 625 square miles of private, state, federal and tribal lands.

Winter rain and snow increased growth of grasses, putting communitie­s such as Wickenburg and Wittman in rural northweste­rn Maricopa County “at a higher risk for wildland fires,” the department said Thursday in a statement.

The department said it plans to conduct patrols and stage crews in higher risk areas to enable fast initial responses. “The goal is to limit fire spread and activity and the amount of resources needed.”

Three of every four wild-land fires in Arizona in 2019 were caused by humans, the department said.

Arizona’s wildfires in 2019 included one that burned 3 square miles in the San Francisco Peaks that sent smoke plumes over Flagstaff but did not reach the city. Officials concluded the fire was sparked July 21 by an excavator striking a rock during a forest restoratio­n project.

Hundreds of firefighte­rs aided by air tankers and spotter aircraft battled that blaze for weeks before it was contained Aug. 12.

Several huge and sometimes deadly wildfires have hit Arizona in recent decades.

The Rodeo-Chediski Fire in 2002 burned about 73.1 square miles on the Fort Apache Indian Reservatio­n and adjacent national forest in eastern Arizona, destroying nearly 500 structures, including 465 homes, and forced the evacuation­s of several woodland communitie­s. Part of that fire was intentiona­lly set, and another part was accidental.

A year later, the Aspen Fire in the Santa Catalina Mountains overlookin­g Tucson burned about 132.8 square miles and destroyed approximat­ely 350 homes and businesses in the the community of Summerhave­n in the Santa Catalina Mountains overlookin­g Tucson. The fire was believed to be human-caused.

The Wallow Fire in 2011, started by an unattended campfire, burned about 836 square miles on the Apache Sitgreaves National Forest in eastern Arizona and western New Mexico.

Tragedy struck in 2013 in Yavapai County in west-central Arizona when 19 firefighte­rs perished in the lightning-caused Yarnell Hill Fire.

The firefighte­rs were trapped in a brush-choked canyon while hiking cross-country to protect the community of Yarnell, where over 100 homes burned.

Last year was an unwelcome rebound from 2018 when 2,000 wildfires burned only 102 square miles on private, state, federal and tribal lands. A year before, Arizona had 2,205 fires that charred 656 square miles.

The interagenc­y Southwest Coordinati­on Center in Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico, said in a March 31 presentati­on on the 2020 fire outlook that northern Arizona remained in severe drought.

Conditions have been more moist overall farther south, where growth of grasses and other small-diameter “fine fuels” that ignite readily and are rapidly consumed by fire have been normal to above normal, the center said.

 ?? Randy Hoeft The Associated Press file ?? Arizona officials say that conditions similar to those of 2019, when the Bermuda Fire occurred, support a forecast of high wildfire activity.
Randy Hoeft The Associated Press file Arizona officials say that conditions similar to those of 2019, when the Bermuda Fire occurred, support a forecast of high wildfire activity.

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