Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A report criticizes the costly approach to a 2016 California wildfire.

Soberanes Fire battle cost $262 million in 2016

- By Brian Melley

LOS ANGELES — When a wildfire burned across Big Sur two years ago and threatened hundreds of homes scattered on the scenic hills, thousands of firefighte­rs responded with overwhelmi­ng force, attacking flames from the air and ground.

In the first week, the blaze destroyed 57 homes and killed a bulldozer operator, then moved into remote wilderness in the Los Padres National Forest. Yet for nearly three more months the attack barely let up.

The Soberanes Fire burned its way into the record books, costing $262 million as the most expensive wildland firefight in U.S. history in what a new report calls an “extreme example of excessive, unaccounta­ble, budget-busting suppressio­n spending.”

The report by Firefighte­rs United for Safety, Ethics, and Ecology criticizes fire managers for not adapting their approach to the changing nature of the blaze. The nonprofit group, which gets funding from the Leonard DiCaprio Foundation and other environmen­tal organizati­ons, advocates ending “warfare on wildfires” by ecological­ly managing them.

The report suggests the Forest Service response was the result of a “use it or lose it” attitude to spend its entire budget, which had been boosted by $700 million because of a destructiv­e 2015 fire season. The agency managed to spend nearly all its 2016 money in a less-active fire season on about half the amount of land that burned the year before.

“They just kept going crazy on it,” report author Timothy Ingalsbee said. “It wasn’t demand-driven. It was supply-driven. They had all this extra money Congress had given them, and they had to justify that.”

Forest Service officials would not comment directly on the report. After asking The Associated Press to provide written questions, the agency declined to answer them and issued a short statement saying it was committed to reducing costs in similarly large fires.

“Protection of people first and then resources are our primary considerat­ions,” the statement said. “Every fire is evaluated to determine the appropriat­e strategy. We continuall­y look for opportunit­ies to improve outcomes and accountabi­lity and to find more cost-efficient and effective methods of managing wildfires.”

 ?? Vern Fisher The Associated Press ?? Members of the California National Guard help load fire hose Aug. 6, 2016, in Palo Colorado Canyon, south of Monterey Calif., during efforts to fight the Soberanes Fire.
Vern Fisher The Associated Press Members of the California National Guard help load fire hose Aug. 6, 2016, in Palo Colorado Canyon, south of Monterey Calif., during efforts to fight the Soberanes Fire.

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