Feds: Forest Towns Need to Become More Resistant to Fires

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by Keith Ridler, Associated Press

Forest-dwelling communities in the West must do a better job at making their homes resistant to wildfires so that wildland firefighters can better defend those homes and surrounding forests, federal, state and local officials said.

The officials meeting on Thursday in Boise said that's one lesson learned following one of Idaho's worst fire seasons with more than 1,300 fires and about 1,200 square miles burned. About 30 officials also considered other aspects of the National Cohesive Wildland Fire Management Strategy approved in April 2014, and that includes firefighter response and making landscapes resilient to fire.

“We will always prioritize life and property as a very high priority,” said Intermountain Region Forester Nora Rasure of the U.S. Forest Service. “But when you draw resources into the community to protect life and property, you're drawing them away from the larger landscape. That larger landscape has some critical values. It's the watershed for communities. It's the economic livelihood for some communities.”

The meeting was part analyzing the past fire season and part brainstorming for ways to face expected challenges in the next fire season.

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Source:  Associated Press

 

Air attack on southern Oregon wildfire – by BLMOregon, on Flickr
Creative Commons Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic License   by  BLMOregon 

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