Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bureau to fund fire breaks

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PORTLAND, Ore. — The Bureau of Land Management has announced plans to fund 11,000 miles of strategic fuel breaks in Idaho, Oregon, Washington, California, Nevada and Utah in an effort to help control wildfires.

The fuel breaks are intended to prop up fire mitigation efforts and help protect firefighte­rs, communitie­s and natural resources, The Oregonian reported Saturday.

According to the Bureau of Land Management, wildfires are becoming bigger and more frequent across the Great Basin states. Between 2009 and 2018, more than 13.5 million acres of Bureau of Land Management land burned in the project area.

“Recovering from the devastatin­g effects of wildfires can take decades in the rugged, high-desert climate of the Great Basin. These tools will help firefighte­rs contain fires when they break out,”

said acting Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Land and Minerals Management Casey Hammond in a news release. “That’s why creating fuel breaks is incredibly important to the entire basin, the people who live in these communitie­s, and our wildland firefighte­rs.”

Fuel breaks are intended to break up fire fuels by creating breaks in vegetation that slow a blaze’s progress. By implementi­ng them strategica­lly, they help firefighte­rs control the spread of fire and can protect homes and resources.

Some scientists debate the effectiven­ess of fuel breaks, raising questions about whether these efforts are worth funding.

But the Bureau of Land Management reports that assessment­s of more than 1,200 fuel breaks found that 78% of them helped control wildfires and 84% helped change fire behavior.

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