San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. FOREST CHIEF CALLS FOR PAUSE OF PRESCRIBED FIRES

Agency to conduct 90-day review of protocols, practices

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN Montoya Bryan writes for The Associated Press.

Federal officials are warning that expanding drought conditions coupled with hot and dry weather, extreme wind and unstable atmospheri­c conditions have led to explosive fire behavior in the southweste­rn U.S., where large fires continued their march across New Mexico on Friday.

Crews also battled blazes in Texas, Colorado and California, where forecaster­s issued red flag warnings due to elevated fire danger across the region.

U.S. Forest Service Chief Randy Moore cited the extreme conditions Friday in announcing a pause on prescribed fire operations on all national forest lands while his agency conducts a 90day review of protocols, decision-making tools and practices ahead of planned operations this fall.

“Our primary goal in engaging prescribed fires and wildfires is to ensure the safety of the communitie­s involved. Our employees who are engaging in prescribed fire operations are part of these communitie­s across the nation,” Moore said in a statement. “The communitie­s we serve, and our employees deserve the very best tools and science supporting them as we continue to navigate toward reducing the risk of severe wildfires in the future.”

The U.S. Forest Service has been facing much criticism for the prescribed fire in New Mexico that escaped its containmen­t lines in April and joined with another blaze to form what is now the largest fire burning in the U.S.

Moore said that in 99.84 percent of cases, prescribed fires go as planned and they remain a valuable tool for reducing the threat of extreme fires by removing dead and down trees and other fuel from overgrown forests.

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, who praised the temporary suspension of intentiona­lly set fires, said it’s clear that well-managed prescribed burns can help improve forest management.

But “it is critical that federal agencies update and modernize these practices in response to a changing climate, as what used to be considered extreme conditions are now much more common,” she said in a statement Friday.

“The situation unfolding in New Mexico right now demonstrat­es without a doubt the grave consequenc­es of neglecting to do so,” she said.

Wildfires have broken out this spring earlier than usual across multiple states in the western U.S., where climate change and an enduring drought are fanning the frequency and intensity of forest and grassland fires. The nation is far outpacing the 10-year average for the number of square miles burned so far this year.

Nationally, more than 5,700 wildland firefighte­rs were battling 16 uncontaine­d large fires that had charred over a half-million acres of dry forest and grassland, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center.

One that broke out Friday in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada about 80 miles north of Sacramento forced some evacuation­s and closed a state highway, but no structures had been damaged and fire officials said they were making progress on the 20-acre blaze. At least two other fires had charred a total of nearly 600 acres.

The biggest U.S. fire has blackened more than 303,000 acres in northern New Mexico. State officials have said they expect the number of homes and other structures that have burned to rise to more than 1,000 as more assessment­s are done.

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