Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

$197M in grants to help boost wildfire prevention

- Dinah Voyles Pulver USA TODAY

Federal officials announced $197 million in grants to help more than 100 communitie­s and tribes across the nation become more resilient to wildfire.

The number of acres burned by wildfires in the United States has more than doubled over 30 years, said Vice President Kamala Harris, speaking during a news conference on the grant projects.

Wildfires are expected to become more extensive with climate change, Harris said. She referred to the latest findings by the United Nations’ Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, released Monday, which show extreme heat and drought have become more common and are worsening wildfire conditions.

“We used to talk about wildfire season,” Harris said. “Now wildfire season is all year round.”

The more than 90 grants are intended to help the communitie­s become safer and lower their wildfire risk through programs such as planning, training and reducing available fuels on land in wildfire-prone areas. The money – from the Infrastruc­ture Investment

and Jobs Act – will be distribute­d by the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e.

The combinatio­n of climate change and increased developmen­t, combined with years of excluding natural fire from ecosystems, has led to year-round fire activity, said agricultur­e secretary Tom Vilsack.

Though the overall number of wildfires has decreased nationwide slightly over time, the number of acres burned has increased. The 10-year average for acres burned has more than doubled since 1994.

The top five years with the most acres burned by wildfires since 1960 have all come since 2006, according to a March 1 report by the Congressio­nal Research Service.

The three biggest years for acres burned were 2015, 2017 and 2020, each at slightly more than 10 million acres.

Last year, 68,988 wildfires burned more than 7.6 million acres.

So far this year, the number of fires and acres burned is below the 10-year average, with 5,972 wildfires over 77,759 acres.

Of the 20 states where projects will be funded, the 10 states receiving the most money are:

California: $78.9 million Washington: $24.9 million Oregon: $23.5 million

New Mexico: $11.5 million Montana: $9.3 million

Utah: $5 million

Nevada: $2.3 million

North Carolina: $1.4 million Colorado: $1.1 million Minnesota: $890,925

In total, the administra­tion said Monday, the Infrastruc­ture Act committed more than $7 billion for the Agricultur­e Department, the Interior Department and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion to mitigate and respond to wildfires.

Last week, the Department of the Interior announced it would distribute $50 million from the Infrastruc­ture Act for wildfire management and hazardous fuels treatment to help limit wildfire severity in at-risk areas.

The Interior Department said it’s investing $1.5 billion over five years to support federal wildland firefighting and community resilience.

 ?? MARCIO J. SANCHEZ/AP FILE ?? Wildfires are expected to become more extensive with climate change, Vice President Kamala Harris said.
MARCIO J. SANCHEZ/AP FILE Wildfires are expected to become more extensive with climate change, Vice President Kamala Harris said.

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