Las Vegas Review-Journal

Officials across the state see high risk for wildfires

Late winter precipitat­ion could complicate matters

- By Colton Lochhead Las Vegas Review-journal

After a sluggish winter, Miracle March was a dream come true for skiers and snowboarde­rs in Northern Nevada.

But that late winter surge in precipitat­ion could cause nightmares for firefighte­rs and officials in Nevada who are prepping for another potentiall­y historic year of wildfires across the state.

“I hate to use the term ‘worst-case scenario,’ but it’s kind of leading into another potentiall­y very active fire season,” said Chris Smallcomb, warning coordinati­on meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service.

Smallcomb was one of several presenters at a briefing Wednesday for Gov. Brian Sandoval, where wildfire prevention and firefighti­ng officials from across the state laid out the risks ahead, what’s been done to try and mitigate the effects and where the state’s readiness stands come peak wildfire season.

In 2017, 1.3 million acres burned in Nevada from wildfires, marking the third-worst wildfire season in recorded history.

And 2018 is off to a hotter start, with 40 fires coming in the first two months of the year, said state Forester Kacey KC. All those fires were started by humans, she said.

“Last year, we didn’t even hit fire season until about June,” KC said.

It’s difficult to predict just how many acres will burn this year, she said, but with the late snowfall and lack of overall snowpack, “conditions are aligning to have a lot of natural-cause fires.”

Northern Nevada in particular is predicted to be one of most at-risk areas in the country for wildfires from May through July, according to KC’S presentati­on.

Late winter brings higher risk

Through Feb. 28, the snowpack for Tahoe and the eastern Sierra Nevada range was at 36 percent of normal, Smallcomb said.

But March brought near-record amounts of precipitat­ion across much of Northern Nevada. And by March 27, snowpack in Tahoe and the eastern Sierra had jumped to 85 percent, Smallcomb said.

And while moisture going back into the ground is almost always a good thing, late precipitat­ion carries serious wildfire risks.

Had the snow come when temperatur­es were cooler, the snow would have been able to freeze, KC said. That would have allowed for a slower release of water into the ground throughout late winter and early spring. But late snow melts before it can compact last year’s grassy growths, and it brings about even more new grass that can turn into wildfire fuel, she said.

“It actually just compounds the issue that’s already out there,” KC said.

The meeting also highlighte­d some of the ways Nevada officials hope to battle fires, including an ever-growing system of cameras stationed atop mountain peaks, which officials hope can reduce firefighte­r response time by 30 to 60 minutes.

Sandoval said after the meeting that he always prepares for the worst, but with the cooperatio­n of local and federal agencies, properly trained personnel and funding for the proper equipment and vehicles, he’s confident the state is ready to handle whatever Mother Nature fires at it this year.

“Regardless of the fire event, we’ll be prepared,” he said.

Contact Colton Lochhead at clochhead@reviewjour­nal. com or 775-461-3820. Follow @ Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

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