This image was distributed by “USFS Fire-California” via their Twitter account. Often we see politicians and media personnel conflate wildfire prevention with fuel management. Now it seems that the U.S. Forest Service is in the same boat. And it looks like there is going to be an effort to train the public to understand a new term — “uncharacteristic wildfire”.
4 thoughts on “Uncharacteristic Wildfire”
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Bill, you said: “Often we see politicians and media personnel conflate wildfire prevention with fuel management.”
Are you saying that prescribed fires and fuels management (e.g. mastication) do not constitute “wildfire prevention,” in your view? If this is your view, can you please explain the rationale behind it?
Thank you,
Loyal Reader
The definition of “prevent” is “to keep something from happening”. The USFS graphic above indicates that the USFS prevents wildfires “by igniting prescribed fires and by mechanical thinning to decrease the amount of combustible materials”.
Decreasing the amount of combustible materials on USFS land does not prevent fires. It may slow the rate of spread and the intensity of wildfires, which may reduce the resistance to control, enabling firefighters, if they arrive early enough and in sufficient numbers, to stop the spread of a wildfire when it burns into a previously treated area. Fuel treatments may reduce the chances of a small to medium-sized fire from becoming a large fire or a megafire, but they don’t prevent the ignition of fires.
Wildfire prevention programs can involve the following strategies:
–School programs
–Contacting the public at events
–Marketing (ads, billboards, signs)
–Contacting recreationists, hunters, and ATV riders in the field
–Regular patrols
–Detection of illegal campfires
–Exhibits and displays
–Poster contests
–Enforcing certain laws about fireworks and campfires
–Controlling, regulating, or inspecting equipment of contractors, railroads, ATVs, and motorcyles
When budgets are reduced, fire prevention is usually first on the chopping block. Now it’s to the point where many people don’t even know that it used to exist. Or that wildfire prevention used to be a full time job for many government employees. They may vaguely remember the term, but don’t know what it is — or was. So even USFS public information personnel when they are designing graphic art can conflate it with fuel reduction, thinking they are the same.
Another example is Senator Ron Wyden who said recently “…there is not enough prevention…” As an example of “prevention”, he was referring to the Ashland Forest Resiliency Project which involves mechanical thinning and prescribed fire. There is no indication that he was actually thinking of the prevention of unwanted IGNITIONS of wildfires.
Many politicians, at the requests of lobbyists and contributors, argue passionately to increase timber cutting on public land, and sometimes say it “prevents fires”. But I’ve never heard a politician argue passionately about adequately funding programs that actually prevent unwanted ignitions of wildfires.
And it costs FAR LESS to prevent a fire than to put one out.
Here is a link to a 1998 National Wildfire Coordinating Group document titled “Wildfire Prevention Strategies”, for those who are curious about what fire prevention used to be.
Now to be fair, I’m not saying that fire prevention programs no longer exist. However, they are a far cry from when they were funded at a much more meaningful level.
Perhaps the good news about uncharacteristic wildfires is it keeps our esteemed host busy during the northern hemisphere winter.
Be interesting to break this out by FS region; I suspect much of the treated acreage is in the SE, with much less treatment going on in the western states (where those “uncharacteristic wildfires” mainly occur).