Fighting fire with fire: Should California burn its forests to protect against catastrophe?
But when a lightning strike ignited a small fire
Seven months after the
These experts say state and federal firefighting agencies should allow more fires that don't threaten the public to run their natural course. What's more, they say fire agencies should conduct more "prescribed" burns -- fires that are deliberately set, under carefully controlled conditions, to reduce the fuels that can feed a disaster.
"Nothing affects fire like fire," said
The Sugar Fire this month, an unplanned fire that ignited soon after a wet winter, was "doing good ecological work for free," said Ingalsbee, a former firefighter with the
In
Added to the mix is antagonism between
Most recently, the
For their part, the
That may soon change. Tahoe forest officials are beginning the process of updating their quarter-century-old management policy to give fire managers, such as
Last week, standing in boots on charred pine and fir needles the Sugar Fire scorched, Allen said that if the updated policy had been in place the Sugar Fire would likely have been allowed to burn a larger area. Although the fire burned near a reservoir that had to be protected, the fire could have burned longer in the opposite direction without doing any harm.
"So it (would do) this natural thinning process that we're trying to do with our prescribed fires," Allen said. "These fires come in and they really clean up our ground fuels, so when a fire comes in here next time, you're going to have less of an impact."
Barriers abound
Data collected by McClatchy and Climate Central, a nonprofit research and news organization based in
By some estimates, many of the state's forests have up to 100 times the amount of small trees and underbrush than what grew prior to white settlement. Meanwhile, researchers estimate that prior to 1800, some 4.5 million acres of the state's forests burned in a typical year -- more than the 1.9 million acres that burned in 2018, the most in modern history.
Yet in a state with more than 30 million acres of forest, only about 87,000 acres of
Prescribed fire treats far more land in other parts of the country. In
"The Southeast has figured out a way to get a lot of fire on the ground," said
But federal officials in
The federal and state agencies responsible for prescribed burns find themselves hemmed in by
"Given the parameters in
There's also a long-standing, deep-seated fear of fire in the heavily wooded West that can make agencies think twice before starting a deliberate fire or letting a natural fire run its course. It's a philosophy that's been around for about a century, when the federal government adopted a strict practice of suppressing fires as quickly as possible, and has only begun to loosen in the past couple of decades.
"It's just the culture around fire in the West. We really have a fire-suppression culture," said
State and federal officials in
"It's ramped up; it's five times the pace we were doing before," said
State leaders are pushing for more. In SB 901, signed last year by former Gov.
But cutting through the red tape to carry out a prescribed fire can be tedious and time-consuming.
In some national forests, the undergrowth has grown so thick, fire managers need to hire contractors to go in first and cut and haul away the dense brush and small trees before they light the match. If they don't, they say, a burn could climb from the tall underbrush to the tops of the big, hardy trees the foresters want to survive.
That sort of pre-thinning requires its own regulatory approval, a process that can take years. Foresters then need to create a "burn plan," which can take up to two years before it's approved, officials say.
"Sometimes from start of the project to final implementation, it can take 15 years," said
Prescribed burns remain controversial among some environmentalists, who aren't afraid to file a legal challenge to kill a burn in court.
As fuels for wildfires have built up in forests, the effects of climate change have also increased the risk of wildfires. Rising temperatures are causing snowpack to melt earlier and drying out landscapes at a faster rate. In the past two decades, climate change caused twice as much Western forestland to burn in wildfires, compared with what would otherwise have been expected,
"You've got a more flammable, ignitable environment," said the institute's
Protecting air quality
Air quality is one of the biggest barriers to prescribed fire in
The
"It's challenging to work through the permitting process," said Quinn-Davidson, the UC forestry specialist.
She said the air districts have limits on how much air pollution they'll allow in a given area on a given day. As a result, "prescribed burning is competing with industry, or automobile emissions, for the same air space," she said.
In some ways, she said, the firefighters and air-quality regulators are working at cross purposes. Air regulators prefer the burns to occur on fairly windy days, so the smoke will blow away from the population. But firefighters want to set fires when winds are calm "because it helps us keep things under control," she said.
Planning a burn means gauging wind patterns, humidity, vegetation types and other factors. Last-minute changes in the weather can force cancellations of scheduled burns that have taken years of study and the planning.
"You've got everything lined up, you've got your people lined up and you're ready to go and then you don't get the green light," said
State officials say the relationship between air regulators and firefighters is improving. "We work collaboratively now, way more than we did five or 10 years ago," said Nielson. In an action plan issued in February,
"We're a public health agency; we recognize that prescribed fire produces smoke," he said. "But we believe it's much more palatable compared to the extreme fire events we've seen recently."
Escapes and private land
Further complicating matters is how land is divvied up in and around much of
The risk of something going haywire is far from theoretical.
In
One of the nation's worst "controlled" burns that wasn't came a year later, when a prescribed fire in the
Blasting the planning behind the fire as badly flawed, then-Interior Secretary
Prescribed fire planning and implementation has improved since then, advocates say, but they acknowledge there's no way to completely reduce the risks. (It's why foresters don't use the term "controlled burn" anymore). Some fire managers worry so much about being sued from an escaped burn they buy personal liability insurance.
Last month, while standing at the site of a 2018 prescribed fire she approved outside
She said she needed the extra protection. After all, she signs her name to the bottom of a lengthy document that spells out every risk and contingency, prior to anyone lighting a flame torch -- and that makes her a target for a savvy civil attorney if the fire jumped its lines and burned someone's home.
"How people would interpret negligence or not, that's the piece that concerns me," she said.
'A big shift'
Natural wildfire was long a part of
But a series of massive wildfires in the West in the late 1800s and early 1900s ushered in an era of fire suppression to protect lucrative stands of timber, led by the
"A century of fire suppression remains firmly entrenched within federal and state firefighting agencies and has left forest floors deep in flammable groundcover," the state's
This approach didn't begin to change until the 1960s, though states in the Southeast had been utilizing the practice against the
Change comes slowly, though. Ingalsbee, of the firefighters' group in
He said the strategy is known as the "
The
In 2015 the
Although the memo is nonbinding, experts such as Quinn-Davidson see the document as a transformation in how agencies such as the
"Historically they did not want to see more fire on the ground," she said. "I think we're seeing a big shift. People are ready to embrace it, and use this tool."
The managers of the
The signs telling the public not to call 911 still stood last week on the busy road outside
Crawford, the fuels technician for the
"They understand the pros of us getting fire on the ground during spring and fall conditions where it's in our favor far outweigh a fire in the summer," he said.
___
(c)2019 The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.)
Visit The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.) at www.sacbee.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Butler County aids Miami Valley in aftermath of 3 devastating tornadoes
Individual Company Report for the Top 50 Insurance Companies, 2019 – ResearchAndMarkets.com
Advisor News
- IRS CEO FRANK J. BISIGNANO VISITS OHIO TO TOUT WORKING FAMILIES TAX CUTS PROVISIONS ON NO TAX ON CAR LOAN INTEREST, NO TAX ON OVERTIME, ENHANCED DEDUCTION FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
- The hidden flaw in insurance AI adoption for advisors and carriers
- Rising healthcare costs impact 401(k) accounts
- What advisors think about pooled employer plans, alternative investments
- AI, stablecoins and private market expansion may reshape financial services by 2030
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- How annuities can help protect retirees from financial scams
- MetLife Inc. (NYSE: MET) Climbs to New 52-Week High
- The Standard and Pacific Guardian Life Announce Entry into Agreement to Transition Individual Annuities Business
- AuguStar Retirement launches StarStream Variable Annuity
- Prismic Life Announces Completion of Oversubscribed Capital Raise
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- New Mental Health Diseases and Conditions Findings from Temple University Outlined (Using Demand Analysis To Examine Private Practice Mental Health Providers’ Decision To Accept Health Insurance): Mental Health Diseases and Conditions
- Reports from Boston Children’s Hospital Advance Knowledge in Health and Medicine (Disparities in health insurance and healthcare access for immigrant children with special healthcare needs): Health and Medicine
- Oregon health director pens New York Times essay to decry nation’s care for new mothers like her
- Soaring Healthcare Costs Put California School Districts And Teachers At Odds
- New Managed Care Study Findings Recently Were Reported by Researchers at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Rates of fall injuries across three claims databases, 2019): Managed Care
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- U-Haul Holding Company Reports Fiscal 2026 Financial Results
- Symetra Honored as 2026 ‘Community Champion’ by the Puget Sound Business Journal
- Kyle Busch attorney rips ‘false narrative’ around life insurance coverage
- Data verification: Modernizing life insurance for the digital consumer
- The hidden risks of indexed universal life and what advisors should know
More Life Insurance News