Oroville Mercury-Register

Fire officials aim to douse blazes quickly

- By Matthew Brown

Amid worsening drought conditions, feds announce resolve to stamp out flames early to avoid megafires.

U. S. officials said Thursday they will try to stamp out wildfires as quickly as possible this year as severe drought tightens its grip across the West and sets the stage for another destructiv­e summer of blazes.

By aggressive­ly responding to smaller fires, officials said they hope to minimize the number of so- called megafires that have become more common as climate change makes the landscape warmer and dryer.

A similar approach was taken last year, driven by the pandemic and a desire to avoid the large congregati­ons of personnel needed to fight major fires. Neverthele­ss, 2020 became one of worst fire years on record with more than 10 million acres (4 million hectares) of land scorched and almost 18,000 houses and other structures destroyed, according to federal data and the research group Headwaters Economics.

California and the Pacific Northwest were especially hard-hit, including an unpreceden­ted million-acre fire in northern California. Wind-driven conflagrat­ions in Oregon and Washington state burned into urban areas and triggered massive evacuation­s.

Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack told firefighti­ng personnel Thursday to brace themselves for another challengin­g year amid what scientists describe as one of the West’s deepest droughts in more than 1,200 years.

Haaland and Vilsack wrote in a memo to fire leaders that 90% of the West is in drought.

“These conditions have not only increased the likelihood of wildfires but they have also strained water supplies and increased tensions in communitie­s,” they wrote.

‘Change the trajectory’

Officials also offered details on the Biden administra­tion’s plan to “change the trajectory” of increasing­ly dangerous wildfires in the West, by vastly expanding the amount of land where tree thinning, controlled burns and other measures are used to reduce flammable material.

The Forest Service plans to at least double the amount of land receiving such treatments to 6 million acres annually — an area bigger than New Hampshire — and possibly up to 12 million acres, spokespers­on Babete Anderson said.

Large fires were active Thursday in Arizona, California and New Mexico. More than a half-million acres already have burned this year nationwide. The year-to- date figure is well below the 10-year average. But the worsening drought is expected to bring increased fire danger that will spread from the Southwest into California, Nevada, the Pacific Northwest and northern Rocky Mountains by summer, officials said.

“Our focus is on smart firefighti­ng, aggressive firefighti­ng, catching these fires when they are small,” said Patty Grantham, acting director of fire and aviation at the U.S. Forest Service.

A shortage of resources last year hobbled firefighti­ng efforts for more than two months at the height of the season. Twelve people involved in firefighti­ng efforts were killed as were at least 45 civilians in Oregon and California, federal officials said.

Firefighte­rs are able to put out about 98% of fires before they get out of control, according to federal officials. It’s the remaining 2% that cause most damage in terms of homes destroyed, said Kimiko Barrett, a wildfire researcher at Bozeman, Montana-based Headwaters Economics.

Homes going up

Yet more homes continuous­ly are being built in fireprone areas. Throw in climate change, and it’s a recipe for destructio­n. Of the more than 89,000 homes and structures that have burned in wildfires since 2005, almost two- thirds were destroyed in the past four years, according to data compiled by Barrett.

“As wildfires gain in intensity and speed — what is referenced as extreme wildfire behavior — they are becoming much more difficult for firefighte­rs to suppress,” she said.

Barrett said now is the time of year for homeowners to take basic steps that improve their property’s chances of surviving fire, such as getting woody debris off the roof and away from the house, and trimming back trees. Also keep a bag packed and evacuation route lined up if a quick escape is needed, she said.

The federal government spends roughly $2 billion to $3 billion annually attacking wildfires using firefighte­rs, bulldozers, aircraft and other heavy equipment. The administra­tion is seeking a nearly 40 % increase, to $1.7 billion, in additional funds for managing fire dangers through thinning, controlled burns, and related projects.

Vilsack said forest treatment work can cost roughly $1,500 per acre, versus $50,000 per acre to put out a fire.

“We need to do a better job treating our forests, reducing hazardous fuels buildup that’s occurred over decades,” he said.

But fire ecologist and environmen­tal advocate Tim Ingalsbee said the government still is sinking too much money into putting out fires by attacking them directly. More wildfires should be allowed, especially in low-risk areas and in wetter months, to burn off underbrush and other fuels before they become so dense that stopping a fire becomes impossible, he said.

“They may stomp on a fire and put it out quick, and then next time when that area burns it burns even more severely, because climate change keeps ratcheting it up,” Ingalsbee said.

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 ?? DAN WATSON — THE SANTA CLARITA VALLEY SIGNAL ?? A tanker makes a drop of fire retardant on the North Fire in Castaic.
DAN WATSON — THE SANTA CLARITA VALLEY SIGNAL A tanker makes a drop of fire retardant on the North Fire in Castaic.
 ?? EMILY ALVARENGA — THE SANTA CLARITA VALLEY SIGNAL ?? A firefighte­r prepares to battle the North Fire from a backyard on Via Patina in Santa Clarita.
EMILY ALVARENGA — THE SANTA CLARITA VALLEY SIGNAL A firefighte­r prepares to battle the North Fire from a backyard on Via Patina in Santa Clarita.

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