Detroit Free Press

Mich. wildfire risk ‘is pretty remarkable’

Dangers prompts DNR to make urgent plea to residents

- Keith Matheny

In the 48 years they’ve been keeping weather data at stations throughout Michigan, Department Natural Resources officials have seen extreme wildfire conditions like this only once or twice before — and perhaps never this bad.

Almost a full month without significan­t rainfall has left leaves, pine needles and other vegetation on forest floors super-dry and ready to ignite with a small spark — as occurred with the 2,400-plus-acre wildfire near Grayling last weekend that led to the evacuation of 300 people and temporaril­y closed Interstate 75 freeway on Saturday. That fire was 100% contained as of Tuesday afternoon.

Nearly all of Michigan faces ‘extreme’ fire danger

“This is pretty remarkable,” said Dan Heckman, a plan section chief with one of DNR’s incident management teams in charge of collecting and analyzing wildfire data.

“It’s not that we’ve got ‘extreme’ fire danger in a few spots; there is ‘extreme’ fire danger across the majority of the state — and if it’s not ‘extreme,’ it’s ‘very high.’ ”

The only two weather stations in Michigan without “extreme” or “very high” fire danger at the moment are at the tip of the Thumb in the Lower Peninsula, and at the tip of the Keweenaw Peninsula in the Upper Peninsula, Heckman said.

‘Just avoid burning’

And low winds that have been an ally to wildfire-fighters over the past few weeks are now expected to increase in coming days, potentiall­y leading to more widespread, intense fires. That’s left DNR officials with an urgent plea to residents.

“The biggest thing right now is just avoid burning,” said Paul Rogers, a DNR wildfire prevention specialist. “There is no reason to be burning yard waste right now. Wait for some rain.”

The DNR controls yard waste burn permitting in the northern Lower and Upper Peninsulas, and is not issuing permits. Burn permits in the southern Lower Peninsula are handled

by local government­s, and people should check with their local fire department­s — but they probably aren’t allowing yard waste-burning now, either.

The DNR has fought 193 wildfires so far this season, burning more than 3,000 acres, most of that in the Grayling-area wildfire. “Many, many” smaller fires have been taken care of by local fire department­s, Rogers said.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer comments

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer urged Michigande­rs to share responsibi­lity in preventing further fires.

“It’s been very dry,” she said after signing a bill in Plymouth Township. “There are three days of rain in the forecast but we know that that can change. I don’t know how much rain we’ll get, so we’re monitoring it very closely. I’m in communicat­ion with my fellow governors from neighborin­g states to ascertain kind of what actions they’re contemplat­ing here as well.

“But we are discouragi­ng people from burning anything right now. There’s not been a rule that’s been announced, but everyone’s got to be really smart. We know with this fire that we’re still putting out was started in an individual private campfire, and so those individual actions impact all of us so that’s why we’re asking people to take this very seriously.”

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