Senators from across the aisle introduce bill to help protect communities from wildfires
California is no stranger to wildfires. Hundreds have died over the years, tens of thousands of structures have burned and entire communities have been devastated. This year, like the devastating fire years we had in 2017 and 2018, looks to be historically bad.
Dozens of wildfires are burning today, including two of the biggest in California history. So far this year, 7,606 wildfires have burned across the state, engulfing more than 2.2 million acres, a new state record. … People have tragically lost their lives and more than 3,300 structures have been destroyed. Hundreds of fires were sparked over a three-day period last month because of nearly 11,000 lightning strikes. And there are still four months left in the traditional fire season. I say traditional because year after year we’re seeing the season start earlier and go later than ever before.
The 2018 Camp Fire was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California history. It killed 85 people, destroyed nearly 14,000 homes and burned more than 150,000 acres in and around the town of Paradise. Some estimates claim it spread as fast as 80 acres per minute.
… In fact, nine of California’s 20 most destructive wildfires have occurred in just the last five years. In 2018, 1.8 million acres burned in California, a record we have already surpassed this year.
We know that climate change is driving this increase in fires. It’s contributing to conditions that can result in more dry lightning strikes like those we saw this month. It’s causing changes in precipitation patterns that leave our forests more susceptible to massive, dangerous fires. It’s causing more unpredictable wind events that take down power lines and spark blazes. And it’s making all fires bigger, hotter and more dangerous.
… The 2018 National Climate Assessment found the number of acres burned in the western United States over the past 30 years is double what would have burned if the climate wasn’t changing.
Clearly we have to change how we prepare our forests and communities to prevent
fires from growing out of control. …
That’s why Senator
Steve Daines, a Montana Republican, and I introduced the Emergency Wildfire and Public Safety Act. Our goal was to write a bill that would help protect communities from catastrophic wildfires. We aim to do this by implementing critical wildfire mitigation projects, sustaining healthier forests that are more resilient to climate change and providing important energy and retrofitting assistance to businesses and homes so they’re better equipped to survive wildfires and power shutoffs.
– One way we can mitigate future fires is by removing dead trees and thinning overgrown
forests. Historic drought and the devastating bark beetle have left nearly
150 million dead trees in California’s forests that provide fuel for fires to quickly grow into the giant infernos we’ve witnessed in recent years.
One major stumbling block to clearing these dead trees and low-value undergrowth has been the lack of a commercial biomass market. Dead trees cannot be used for lumber and have little use beyond being burned for biomass. But, without a viable market, their removal is costly and unattractive to private business. Currently, that represents a significant, and costly, burden on state and local governments to get rid of these dangerous trees. That’s why our bill helps foster the growth of a market and lifts an export ban on this timber if no domestic market
can be found. Removing millions of dead and lowvalue trees will slow the spread of wildfires and give firefighters more time to contain and extinguish fires before they can grow out of control.
– We can also slow the spread of fire by increasing the size of firebreaks and gaps in vegetation between forests and homes so our communities are protected.
Our bill facilitates the use of those firebreaks and helps homeowners retrofit with fire-resistant materials to lessen the chances of whole neighborhoods being destroyed by an approaching fire, as we saw in Paradise.
Additionally, by increasing the use of controlled burns, we could remove undergrowth to make our forests more resilient to catastrophic fires. Prescribed burns recreate the natural phenomenon of
undergrowth removal that occurred for millennia, preventing forests from becoming overgrown and more susceptible to unstoppable fires. Our bill creates a training center for firefighters on best practices for controlled burns so they can implement them in our forests.
– We need to do more to prepare homes, businesses and emergency services for future fires. Our bill specifically helps critical sites like hospitals and police stations become more energy efficient and better adapted to function during power shutoffs. It also promotes research for new methods of distributed electricity like microgrids that minimize the need for widespread power shutoffs, which may become more common as climate changes increases the frequency of dangerous hot and windy conditions.