Porterville Recorder

‘Burn boss’ arrest inflames Western land use tensions

- By ANDREW SELSKY

SALEM, Ore. (AP) — When U.S. Forest Service personnel carried out a prescribed burn in a national forest in Oregon on Oct. 13, it wound up burning fencing that a local family, the Hollidays, uses to corral cattle.

The crew returned six days later to restart the prescribed burn, but the flames then spread onto the family’s ranch and resulted in the arrest of “burn boss” Rick Snodgrass.

Repercussi­ons of the singular incident in the remote corner of eastern Oregon have reached all the way to Washington, D.C., where Forest Service Chief Randy Moore denounced the arrest. But the ranching family is applauding Grant County Sheriff Todd Mckinley’s actions.

“It was just negligence, starting a fire when it was so dry, right next to private property,” said Sue Holliday, matriarch of the family.

The incident has once again exposed tensions over land management in the West, where the federal government owns nearly half of all the land.

In 2016, that tension resulted in the 41-day occupation by armed rightwing extremists of the

Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in adjacent Harney County to protest the imprisonme­nt of two ranchers, Dwight Hammond and his son Steven, who were convicted of arson for setting fires on federal land.

In a telephone interview, Tonna Holliday, Sue’s daughter, said whoever was responsibl­e for burning up to 40 acres (16 hectares) of their property should face justice.

“How can the Hammonds be held accountabl­e but the United States Forest Service not be held accountabl­e when it’s the same thing?” Holliday said.

However, the Hammonds

were convicted of felony arson for intentiona­lly setting fires on federal land, including a fire set to allegedly cover up their slaughter of a herd of deer. Snodgrass is being investigat­ed for alleged reckless burning, a misdemeano­r.

The practice of mechanical thinning and prescribed fires in overgrown forests is credited with saving homes, for example during a 2017 wildfire near Sisters, Oregon. But some efforts have gone terribly awry, including causing the largest fire in New Mexico’s history earlier this year. Several hundred homes were destroyed, livelihood­s of the

rural residents were lost and water supply systems were compromise­d.

The federal agency acknowledg­ed in a review that it failed to consider

the historic drought and unfavorabl­e spring weather conditions as fire managers attempted to reduce flammable undergrowt­h in northern New Mexico.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY MANDY TAYLOR ?? Smoke from a prescribed burn looms over cattle belonging to the Holliday family on Oct. 13, 2022, near the town of John Day, Ore.
AP PHOTO BY MANDY TAYLOR Smoke from a prescribed burn looms over cattle belonging to the Holliday family on Oct. 13, 2022, near the town of John Day, Ore.

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