The Sentinel-Record

US vows to work more closely with states to fight wildfires

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — As wildfires choke California and other Western states, the Trump administra­tion pledged Thursday to work more closely with state and local officials to prevent wildfires from ever starting.

Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue said the Forest Service and other agencies will step up efforts to cut down small trees and underbrush and set controlled fires to remove trees that serve as fuel for catastroph­ic blazes, including a series of deadly fires that have spread through drought-parched forests and rural communitie­s in California.

Six firefighte­rs have died in those wildfires.

Perdue, who toured the California fires this week, said they were “stark reminders of the immense forest-fire health crisis in this country, and the urgent need to dramatical­ly increase our preventati­ve forest treatments.”

While officials have boosted forest management efforts in recent years, more needs to be done, Perdue said.

“To truly protect our forests, we must increase the number and the size of our (prevention) projects across the local landscape and across boundaries, and frankly we can’t do this by ourselves,” Perdue said at a news conference at the Capitol.

Perdue pledged a “shared stewardshi­p” approach in which the Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management and other federal agencies work with state, local and tribal officials to fight and prevent wildfires.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, meanwhile, said national forests have suffered from “gross mismanagem­ent” for decades.

“The fuel loads are up. The density of our forests is historical. We have dead and dying timber,” Zinke said at a Cabinet meeting at the White House.

“This is unacceptab­le that year after year we’re watching our forests burn, our habitat destroyed and our communitie­s devastated,” Zinke added. “And it is absolutely preventabl­e. Public lands are for everybody to enjoy and not just held hostage by these special-interest groups.”

Zinke has long complained that environmen­tal “extremists” make it difficult for trees to be logged to reduce fire risk.

“Whether you’re a global warmist advocate or denier, it doesn’t make a difference when you have rotting timber, when housing prices are going up … yet we are wasting billions of board feet” of timber that could go to local lumber mills, he said.

The focus on wildfire comes as California and other states face longer and more destructiv­e wildfire seasons because of drought, warmer weather attributed to climate change and homes built deeper into forests.

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