Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Ex-Forest Firefighter Says Red Tape for Prevention Work is 'Daunting'
TLBBHMAP3-U010ALB5ANM-348f959abae2-512-300x300-1
By Jim Jakobs, Digital Producer
Published 4 years ago on
September 18, 2020

Share

Adam Hernandez oversaw prescribed fire and fuels management for the Sierra National forest before leaving the U.S. Forest Service last year. He now teaches wildland fire technology at Reedley College and offers a unique perspective into how the USFS was trying to manage the forest before the Creek Fire ravaged the landscape.

Hernandez started working on the Sierra National forest in 2008. His experiences ranged from fire prevention, to fire suppression on hotshot crews, to fuels management.

He understands why people are frustrated at the devastation of the Creek Fire, but he believes his former colleagues were making great strides in trying to prevent what occurred. “Just like any forest in the central Sierra there’s a lot of effort to try to restore fire back into the landscape,” Hernandez said to GV Wireâ„  by Zoom.

Hernandez believes the Creek Fire just happened to be very bad timing before the project work could be finished.

Red Tape Can Add Years to a Project

“You can imagine a 50,000 acre project, just doing the surveys alone from each specialty group from archaeology, to wildlife, to aquatics, to watershed, that’s a daunting process.”–Adam Hernandez, Wildland Fire Technology Instructor at Reedley College and former USFS Firefighter

Depending on the scale of a project, Hernandez said, the paperwork involved can be laborious and time consuming. For bigger projects, he says 2 to 3 years of pre-work is not out of the ordinary. Smaller projects can be done in about 6 months time.

Hernandez says attention must be paid to native species, water quality issues, how the manipulation of timber will impact the environment and animals, not to mention the amount of time allotted for public comment.

“You can imagine a 50,000 acre project, just doing the surveys alone from each specialty group from archaeology, to wildlife, to aquatics, to watershed, that’s a daunting process,” Hernandez explained. “What we need on the landscape are very large projects. Increasing the pace and scale of some of this work that we’re doing is necessary.”

As for the length of time it takes to get preparations done before a prescribed burn can be done? “Yeah, there’s a healthy process for anything to do with managing public lands,” says Hernandez. “Planning a project is a lengthy and expensive process.”

He says the difficulty with big bureaucracies is there are a lot of built in institutional barriers that make it challenging. “But the will is absolutely there,” he says reassuringly.

Private Industry Involvement

Hernandez says there is definitely a role for private industry to play in helping create a healthier and better forest.

“The forest service doesn’t have every single tool in the arsenal to get all the work done.” Hernandez said the USFS specializes in managing the land, doing prescribed burning, and implementing policies correctly.

“Everybody plays a part. It’s not just the federal agencies. It’s the private companies and biomass that can help alleviate some of these fuel loadings that are out there.”

Status of the Sierra National Forest

In 2008, when Hernandez began working in the forest, he said many of the well-known recreation areas already had been managed well. He says a lot of prescribed fire had been utilized to make certain areas very healthy.

“But when you talk about 1.2 million acres of national forest, there’s going to be places that don’t get the attention because maybe they’re not in an urban interface area,” said Hernandez. The places where people and homes run up against wildland must be the priority, he added.

He says when he was working in the forest there was a lot of work already being done via the Dinkey Landscape Restoration Project. The DLRP covered 154,000 acres in the southern Sierra Nevada within Fresno County. The project used prescribed fire, mechanical thinning, watershed improvements and other restoration treatments. The goals? Create a landscape resilient to uncharacteristic wildfire, insect and disease, climate change, drought, invasive species, and air pollution.

Hernandez also says a lot of planning had been going into doing more prescribed burns throughout the Sierra National Forest right up to the start of the Creek fire.

Better Path Forward

GV Wireâ„  asked if he could lean on his experience and wave a magic wand to make things better for future generations, what would he do?

“We have our suppression program that we’ve always had,” says Hernandez. “We need it. We fund it pretty heavily.”

He then considered an alternative.

“What if we had prescribed fire teams, and the funding that currently goes into the fire suppression teams is also directed at the same levels into fuels prescribed fire teams?”  Hernandez . “If they could just go into an area with all the resources and funding they’d need. That would be my magic wand.”

He thinks this could ultimately lead to a healthier forest with less fire and less need to spend large amounts of money on fire suppression.

DON'T MISS

New California Rule Aims to Limit Health Care Cost Increases to 3% Annually

DON'T MISS

Shohei Ohtani Has 3 Doubles, Landon Knack Gets 1st Win as Dodgers Rout Nats

DON'T MISS

Lindor Slugs a Pair of 2-Run Homers to Lead Mets Over Giants

DON'T MISS

Judge Keeps Reedley Biolab Suspect in Jail. Was Operation Just a Warehouse?

DON'T MISS

Cruisin’ Through Kingsburg’s 29th Annual Car Show

DON'T MISS

Fuzzy Little Adeline Will Purr You to Sleep

DON'T MISS

Boeing’s Financial Woes Continue, While Families of Crash Victims Urge US to Prosecute

DON'T MISS

Police Tangle With Students in Texas and California as Wave of Campus Protest Against Gaza War Grows

DON'T MISS

Meet the Valley Republican Predicting a November Win Over Esmeralda Soria

DON'T MISS

Wired Wednesday: Construction Workers on 2018 Fresno Unified Project Still Not Paid

UP NEXT

Ancestry Website to Catalogue Names of Japanese Americans Incarcerated During World War II

UP NEXT

Sacramento Bee Accused of Mangling the Facts About Fish Caught in Pumps

UP NEXT

Google Fires More Workers Who Protested Its Deal With Israel

UP NEXT

CA Lawmakers Reject Bill Cracking Down on Utilities Spending Customers’ Money

UP NEXT

What Do Supreme Court Justices Say About Homelessness?

UP NEXT

Oprah Winfrey and Dwayne Johnson Pledged $10M for Maui Wildfire Survivors. They Gave Much More.

UP NEXT

Did Fresno Unified’s Biggest Contractor Not Pay Its Workers? Company Still Gets Millions After Civil Penalty

UP NEXT

Work Starts on Bullet Train Line From Las Vegas to LA

UP NEXT

Will CA Lawmakers Crack Down on Spending by Utility Companies?

UP NEXT

Will There Be a Third Measure E? What Richard Spencer Says.

Judge Keeps Reedley Biolab Suspect in Jail. Was Operation Just a Warehouse?

39 mins ago

Cruisin’ Through Kingsburg’s 29th Annual Car Show

4 hours ago

Fuzzy Little Adeline Will Purr You to Sleep

Animals /

4 hours ago

Boeing’s Financial Woes Continue, While Families of Crash Victims Urge US to Prosecute

16 hours ago

Police Tangle With Students in Texas and California as Wave of Campus Protest Against Gaza War Grows

16 hours ago

Meet the Valley Republican Predicting a November Win Over Esmeralda Soria

17 hours ago

Wired Wednesday: Construction Workers on 2018 Fresno Unified Project Still Not Paid

17 hours ago

Slumping California Risks Losing World’s ‘5th Largest Economy’ Title

17 hours ago

Ukraine Uses Long-Range Missiles Secretly Provided by US to Hit Russian-Held Areas, Officials Say

19 hours ago

Upward Bound: Edison High’s Garcia Headed to Johns Hopkins

Local Education /

21 hours ago

New California Rule Aims to Limit Health Care Cost Increases to 3% Annually

SACRAMENTO — Doctors, hospitals and health insurance companies in California will be limited to annual price increases of 3% starting in 202...

4 mins ago

4 mins ago

New California Rule Aims to Limit Health Care Cost Increases to 3% Annually

12 mins ago

Shohei Ohtani Has 3 Doubles, Landon Knack Gets 1st Win as Dodgers Rout Nats

20 mins ago

Lindor Slugs a Pair of 2-Run Homers to Lead Mets Over Giants

39 mins ago

Judge Keeps Reedley Biolab Suspect in Jail. Was Operation Just a Warehouse?

4 hours ago

Cruisin’ Through Kingsburg’s 29th Annual Car Show

Animals /
4 hours ago

Fuzzy Little Adeline Will Purr You to Sleep

16 hours ago

Boeing’s Financial Woes Continue, While Families of Crash Victims Urge US to Prosecute

16 hours ago

Police Tangle With Students in Texas and California as Wave of Campus Protest Against Gaza War Grows

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend