After starting fire, U.S. asks victims to pay
TIERRA MONTE, N.M. — After the U.S. government started the largest wildfire in New Mexico’s recorded history in April, it is asking victims to share recovery costs on private land, jeopardizing relief efforts, according to residents and state officials.
The blaze was sparked by U.S. Forest Service (USFS) prescribed fires to reduce wildfire risk. The burns went out of control after a series of missteps, torching 432 residences and over 1,373 square kilometres of mostly privately owned forests and meadows, much of it held by members of centuries-old Indo-hispano ranching communities.
“Today I’m announcing the federal government’s covering 100 per cent of the cost,” President Joe Biden said during a visit to New Mexico in June. Biden was announcing a disaster declaration that covered debris removal and emergency protective measures.
But federal cost-sharing statutes on other federal relief programs are limiting Biden’s authority and exposing holes in the government safety net meant to help survivors and restore landscapes.
It is a system more Americans will turn to as extreme fires and flooding become the climate change norm.
“I DIDN’T CAUSE THIS DAMN FIRE”
Biden’s measure was meant to bridge FEMA relief and a congressional bill that may pass in the fall to provide 100 per cent federal compensation for losses from the so-called Hermit’s Peak Calf Canyon fire.
Daniel Encinias was among survivors who met Biden and was told by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) officials he would get timely support at little or no cost.
He, his wife Lori, three teenage children, four dogs and eight cats are living in a camping trailer next to the ashes of their home in Tierra Monte, 35 miles northeast of Santa Fe.
Encinias submitted an application to the USDA’S Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to fix his well, but was told to share 25 per cent of costs based on a federal statute that could not be waived as it did not fall under Biden’s declaration.
Encinias said he was told by NRCS officials his application would be considered in September and recovery work would begin six to 12 months thereafter if he was accepted
So, like many fire survivors in this low-income area who have no insurance, the rancher and retired electrician did the work himself.
“Why the hell am I going to pay anything when I didn’t cause this damn fire?” said Encinias, 55, as he fed his cattle hay he was forced to buy after his baler was torched.
An official for the NRCS’ local office in Las Vegas, N.M., where Encinias applied for support directed questions to the national office. Officials there did not respond to requests for comment.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
UNCERTAIN TIMELINE FOR RECOVERY RELIEF
Many fire-hit families cannot afford sharing at least 25 per cent of costs on the USDA’S Emergency Forest Restoration Program (EFRP), which offers relief such as stabilization of burn areas prone to flash flooding, according to New Mexico State Forester Laura Mccarthy. Residents sometimes own large areas of land passed down from the 1800s Spanish-mexican land grants while working bluecollar jobs.
“They’re really struggling,” said Mccarthy.
That has left locals, state officials and federal agencies counting on cost shares to be dropped and passage of the congressional bill.
Democratic Representative Teresa Leger Fernandez sponsored the legislation which passed the House and will probably need help from Republicans in the Senate. The office of Senate minority leader Mitch Mcconnell did not immediately respond to a request for comment
Leger Fernandez is in talks with the USDA and White House on dropping cost shares and helped negotiate a waiver with the NRCS for flood mitigation work on private lands.
“The federal government burns your house down so they are responsible in my mind to pay 100 per cent of the cost of rebuilding,” said Leger Fernandez
Support cannot get to the 45-mile-long disaster area fast enough.
The blaze burned around 68.8 hectares of rancher Kenny Zamora’s forest. His pastures in El Turquillo are covered with up to two feet of sludge after monsoon rains triggered debris flows on hillsides that no longer absorb water. The torrents have twice knocked down fences.