Los Angeles Times

California, West in for tough fire year again, officials warn

- BY ANNA M. PHILLIPS

After a 2020 fire season that shattered records and killed 33 people in California, federal wildfire experts predict another tough one for the state due to widespread and worsening drought conditions.

Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and Secretary of Agricultur­e Tom Vilsack said in a call with reporters Thursday that they had been briefed by government wildfire experts at the National Interagenc­y Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, to expect another extremely active fire season complicate­d, for the second year, by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

With nearly half of the United States gripped by a severe drought, officials said that Americans living throughout much of the West should plan for a year of “above average wildfire potential.”

“Another difficult year is expected in California due to extensive drought throughout the entire state,” Jeff Rupert, who leads the Interior Department’s firefighti­ng efforts, said on the call.

So far this year, firefighte­rs have battled blazes in California, Arizona and New Mexico that were fueled by unusually dry conditions. A lack of monsoon rains in 2020 followed by a dry winter, in which California and other states got far less snow than usual, has left trees, grass and chaparral primed to burn.

In a memo to federal wildfire leaders, Haaland and Vilsack wrote: “90 percent of the West is currently experienci­ng drought.”

“These conditions have not only increased the likelihood of wildfires but they have also strained water supplies and increased tensions in communitie­s,” they added.

Other factors, such as the frequency and severity of heat waves, as well as the number of lightning strikes, will affect the region’s fire risk in the coming months.

Between the Forest Service and the Interior Department, the federal government is expected to deploy about 15,000 firefighte­rs this year, officials said, roughly the same number as in previous years.

The Biden administra­tion is seeking to increase spending on fighting wildfires by about 4%.

Separately, the Forest Service has asked Congress to approve a $476-million increase for forest management projects to reduce the risk of out-of-control fires. This work could include thinning out small trees, clearing dry brush and intentiona­lly setting beneficial fires, known as prescribed fire, to prevent flames from leaping out of forests and into nearby communitie­s.

 ?? U.S. OFFICIALS ROBERT GAUTHIER Los Angeles Times ?? expect a year of “above average wildfire potential” in much of the West because of drought. Above, children in Monrovia watch as the Bobcat fire rages on hillsides behind their backyard in September.
U.S. OFFICIALS ROBERT GAUTHIER Los Angeles Times expect a year of “above average wildfire potential” in much of the West because of drought. Above, children in Monrovia watch as the Bobcat fire rages on hillsides behind their backyard in September.

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