Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Feds Pledge to Thin Forests, Work with States to Fight Wildfires
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
August 17, 2018

Share

WASHINGTON — As wildfires choke California and other Western states, the Trump administration pledged Thursday to work more closely with state and local officials, including to those in California, to prevent wildfires from starting.

“To truly protect our forests, we must increase the number and the size of our (prevention) projects across the local landscape and across boundaries, and frankly we can’t do this by ourselves.” — Sonny Perdue, Agriculture Secretary
Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said the Forest Service and other agencies will step up efforts to cut down small trees and underbrush and set controlled fires to remove trees that serve as fuel for catastrophic blazes, including a series of deadly fires that have spread through drought-parched forests and rural communities in California.
Six firefighters have died in those wildfires.
Perdue, who toured the California fires this week, said they were “stark reminders of the immense forest-fire health crisis in this country, and the urgent need to dramatically increase our preventative forest treatments.”
While officials have boosted forest management efforts in recent years, more needs to be done, Perdue said.
Perdue pledged a “shared stewardship” approach in which the Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management and other federal agencies work with state, local and tribal officials to fight and prevent wildfires.

National Forests Suffer From “Gross Mismanagement”

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, meanwhile, said national forests have suffered from “gross mismanagement” for decades.
“The fuel loads are up. The density of our forests is historical. We have dead and dying timber,” Zinke said at a Cabinet meeting at the White House.

“This is unacceptable that year after year we’re watching our forests burn, our habitat destroyed and our communities devastated. And it is absolutely preventable. Public lands are for everybody to enjoy and not just held hostage by these special-interest groups.” — Ryan Zinke, Interior Secretary
Zinke has long complained that environmental “extremists” make it difficult for trees to be logged to reduce fire risk.
“Whether you’re a global warmist advocate or denier, it doesn’t make a difference when you have rotting timber, when housing prices are going up … yet we are wasting billions of board feet” of timber that could go to local lumber mills, he said.
The focus on wildfire comes as California and other states face longer and more destructive wildfire seasons because of drought, warmer weather attributed to climate change and homes built deeper into forests.
Yosemite National Park’s scenic valley in Northern California reopened Tuesday after a 20-day, smoked-forced closure, and hundreds of people were evacuated from Glacier National Park in Montana after a wildfire destroyed at least nine homes and cabins in one of the park’s historic districts.
In Washington state, meanwhile, officials have distributed masks to combat unhealthy air filled with smoke from wildfires that have blanketed the Northwest.
Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said the current crisis underscores the importance of preventing wildfires. “It is unacceptable to me to have Northwest seniors and young people being afraid to open their doors in the morning because they are afraid of smoke,” he said.

The New Normal

Longer and hotter wildfire seasons are the “new normal,” said Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., “and we have to meet it with a very, very aggressive response” that includes drones, satellites and other technology.
Not all efforts will be popular, Cantwell said, noting that some Seattle-area residents opposed controlled burns this spring because they feared the smoke.
“I guarantee you now, Seattle would definitely take a little bit of smoke instead of the eventual, all-summer-long smoke that we’re getting,” she said.
Perdue and other officials said the focus on prevention could save money, noting that federal wildfire costs approached a record $3 billion last year. “There’s no quick fix,” Perdue said, but increased collaboration could eventually save money or at least “get more done with the same costs.”
Congress earlier this year created a wildfire disaster fund to help combat increasingly severe wildfires. The law sets aside more than $20 billion over eight years to allow the Forest Service and other federal agencies to end a practice of raiding non-fire-related accounts to cover wildfire costs.
The plan takes effect in October 2019.

DON'T MISS

Local Film ‘Camp Terror’ Hits the Streaming Services

DON'T MISS

Man Dies After Rescuing His 2 Children in Mississippi River

DON'T MISS

Is Inflation Finally Corralled? Powell Says Federal Reserve Believes It’s Close

DON'T MISS

New Village Green Park Opens in Loma Vista as Clovis Community Hub

DON'T MISS

Gomez Guilty of Murdering Los Hooligans Bass Player

DON'T MISS

Biden Says It Was a Mistake to Say He Wanted to Put Trump in a ‘Bull’s-Eye’

DON'T MISS

Dealing Blow to Biden’s Reelection Bid, Teamsters Union May Withhold Endorsement

DON'T MISS

Tesla CEO Elon Musk Appears to Confirm Delay in Aug. 8 Robotaxi Unveil Event to Make Design Change

DON'T MISS

Smittcamp Asks Court to Drop His Lawsuit Against Controversial NW Fresno Project

DON'T MISS

Measure P Arts Grants Spark Debate and a Meeting Tonight

UP NEXT

Man Dies After Rescuing His 2 Children in Mississippi River

UP NEXT

Gomez Guilty of Murdering Los Hooligans Bass Player

UP NEXT

Biden Says It Was a Mistake to Say He Wanted to Put Trump in a ‘Bull’s-Eye’

UP NEXT

Smittcamp Asks Court to Drop His Lawsuit Against Controversial NW Fresno Project

UP NEXT

Measure P Arts Grants Spark Debate and a Meeting Tonight

UP NEXT

Trump Receives Enough Delegate Votes to Officially be Republicans’ Nominee

UP NEXT

13 Prime Steak Owners Get You All Yolked up at New Clovis Eatery

UP NEXT

Gov. Gavin Newsom: California Leads Nation in Economic Growth and Expansion

UP NEXT

Fresno Council Zoom Bomber Indicted on Federal Charges

UP NEXT

What to Know About the Attempt on Trump’s Life and Its Aftermath

New Village Green Park Opens in Loma Vista as Clovis Community Hub

12 hours ago

Gomez Guilty of Murdering Los Hooligans Bass Player

12 hours ago

Biden Says It Was a Mistake to Say He Wanted to Put Trump in a ‘Bull’s-Eye’

12 hours ago

Dealing Blow to Biden’s Reelection Bid, Teamsters Union May Withhold Endorsement

14 hours ago

Tesla CEO Elon Musk Appears to Confirm Delay in Aug. 8 Robotaxi Unveil Event to Make Design Change

15 hours ago

Smittcamp Asks Court to Drop His Lawsuit Against Controversial NW Fresno Project

16 hours ago

Measure P Arts Grants Spark Debate and a Meeting Tonight

16 hours ago

Tedford Exits Fresno State Football. Tim Skipper Is the Next Bulldog Up.

16 hours ago

Biden Orders Secret Service to Protect RFK Jr. After Attempt on Trump’s Life

17 hours ago

Trump Receives Enough Delegate Votes to Officially be Republicans’ Nominee

17 hours ago

Local Film ‘Camp Terror’ Hits the Streaming Services

The Central Valley film “Camp Terror” has been released to streaming platforms. It can be seen on Amazon, Amazon Canada, Vimeo, ...

49 mins ago

49 mins ago

Local Film ‘Camp Terror’ Hits the Streaming Services

11 hours ago

Man Dies After Rescuing His 2 Children in Mississippi River

12 hours ago

Is Inflation Finally Corralled? Powell Says Federal Reserve Believes It’s Close

12 hours ago

New Village Green Park Opens in Loma Vista as Clovis Community Hub

12 hours ago

Gomez Guilty of Murdering Los Hooligans Bass Player

12 hours ago

Biden Says It Was a Mistake to Say He Wanted to Put Trump in a ‘Bull’s-Eye’

14 hours ago

Dealing Blow to Biden’s Reelection Bid, Teamsters Union May Withhold Endorsement

15 hours ago

Tesla CEO Elon Musk Appears to Confirm Delay in Aug. 8 Robotaxi Unveil Event to Make Design Change

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend