SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Wearing soot-smudged, fire-resistant clothing and helmets, several wildland firefighters armed with hoes moved through a stand of ponderosa pines as flames tore through the underbrush.
The firefighters weren’t there to extinguish the fire. They had started it.
The prescribed burn, ignited this month near the scenic mountain town of Bend, is part of a massive effort in wildlands across the U.S. West to prepare for a fire season that’s expected to be even worse than last year′s record-shattering one.
The U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management have thinned by hand, machines and prescribed burns about 1.8 million acres (728,000 hectares) of forest and brushland since last season, officials from the agencies told The Associated Press. They typically treat some 3 million (1.2 million hectares) acres every year.
All that activity, though, has barely scratched the surface. The federal government owns roughly 640 million acres (260 million hectares) in the U.S. All but 4% of it lies in the West, including Alaska, with some of it unsuitable for prescribed burning.
“All these steps are in the right direction, but the challenge is big and complex,” said John Bailey, professor of silviculture and fire management at Oregon State University. “And more needs to be done to even turn the corner.”
The efforts face a convergence of bleak forces.
Severe drought has turned forests and grasslands into dry fuels, ready to ignite from a careless camper or a lightning strike. More people are building in areas bordering wildlands, expanding the so-called wildland-urban interface, an area where wildfires impact people the most. Invasive, highly flammable vegetation is spreading uncontrolled across the West.
“I’m seeing probably the worst combination of conditions in my lifetime,” said Derrick DeGroot, a county commissioner in southern Oregon’s Klamath County. “We have an enormous fuel load in the forests, and we are looking at a drought unlike we’ve seen probably in the last 115 years.”
Asked how worried he is about the 2021 fire season, DeGroot said: “On a scale of 1 to 10, I’m a 12. Nothing looks good.”
In other prevention measures, utility companies are removing vegetation around power lines and are ready to impose blackouts when those lines threaten to spark a fire.
Armies of firefighters are being beefed up. And communities are offering incentives for residents to make their own properties fire-resistant.
Still, much work remains to change the West's trajectory with fire, particularly in two fundamental areas, said Scott Stephens, professor of wildland fire science at the University of California, Berkeley.
“One is getting people better prepared for the inevitability of fire in areas like the wildland urban interface. That includes new construction,” he said. "And the second is getting our ecosystems better prepared for climate change and fire impacts.”
On the local level, individuals and communities need to create defensible spaces and evacuation plans, Stephens said. On the government level, a lot more resources need to go to managing the forests through prescribed burns and thinning.
“I think we’ve got one to two decades," he said. "If we don’t do this in earnest, we’re frankly just going to be watching the forest change right in front of our eyes from fire, climate change, drought, insects, things of that nature.”
Besides overgrown forests, the West faces a newer threat: cheatgrass.
Jessica Gardetto, spokeswoman for the National Interagency Fire Center, in Boise, Idaho, said trying to get rid of the invasive grass is like the endless toil of Sisyphus, the Greek mythological figure who was forced to roll a boulder up a hill, only for it to roll down as it neared the top, over and over again.
Cheatgrass grows prolifically after a wildfire and becomes incredibly flammable. After a fire is put out, the first thing to come back is cheatgrass.
“It starts this horrible cycle that is really difficult to combat,” Gardetto said.
Prescribed burns target vegetation that carries flames into forest canopies, where they can explode into massive wildfires. But planning and preparing for them can take two to five years. And carrying them out is a never-ending task.
While targeting one forest, other forests continue to grow, creating “this vast buildup across the landscape,” Gardetto said.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom and U.S. Forest Service Chief Vicki Christiansen signed an agreement last August committing the state and the federal agency to scale up treatment of forest and wildlands to 1 million acres (405,000 hectares) annually by 2025.
They have a long way to reach that goal. Cal Fire, a state agency responsible for protecting over 31 million acres (12.5 million hectares) of California’s privately owned wildlands, treated some 20,000 acres (8,100 hectares) with prescribed fire and thinning from last summer through March.
Meanwhile, California increased the number of seasonal firefighters by almost 50%, according to Lynne Tolmachoff, spokeswoman for Cal Fire.
With the fire season getting longer each year, Colorado lawmakers last spring allocated about $3 million to increase staffing at the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control, said Mike Morgan, its director.
“Historically, wildland firefighters were college students. They’d get out of school on Memorial Day, they’d go fight fire, and they’d go back to school on Labor Day,” Morgan said. “Well, now we’re having fires every month of the year, and so we need firefighters year-round.”
The Bureau of Land Management is transforming its seasonal firefighting force to fulltime with a $13 million budget increase, Gardetto said.
Despite all these efforts, warnings are going out telling people to be ready for wildfires.
The Oregon Office of Emergency Management advised residents on Monday to have a bag packed and have an evacuation plan.
“Abnormally dry conditions and pre-season fires on the landscape are causing concern for the 2021 wildfire season,” the agency said. “Now is the time for Oregonians to prepare themselves, their families and their homes for wildfire.”
Much more can be done to increase wildfire resilience, but often there are tradeoffs, said Erica Fleishman, professor at Oregon State University’s College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences.
Cities or states could require defensible spaces around homes. Building codes could call for fire-resistant materials. That would drive up construction costs but would also mean a home would be less likely to burn and need rebuilding, she said.
“The insurance industry and the building industry and communities and lawmakers are all going to need to have the will to create these changes,” she said.
Fleishman also believes more prescribed fires could be conducted in the wildland-urban interface, but said “society is risk averse.”
“Right now, there’s not, in many cases, a whole lot of will to do it,” she said.
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Associated Press writers Don Thompson in Sacramento, California; Thomas Peipert in Denver; and Daisy Nguyen in San Francisco contributed to this report.
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