Proposed Wildfire Legislation
Several bills regarding wildfire are up for review in the Colorado legislature this session.
SB 14-047 Wildland Firefighters Death Benefit Payments
This bill would direct the state to make a lump-sum payment of $10,000 to the survivors of a seasonal wildland firefighter employed by state or local government and killed in the line of duty.
SB 14-046 Local Firefighter Safety Grant Program
This bill would create a local firefighter safety and disease prevention fund that would be used to support training and the purchase of equipment designed to increase firefighter safety and prevent occupation-related diseases.
HB 1010 Corrections to Prescribed Burning Program
This bill makes several technical corrections to the bill that created a prescribed burning program in the Department of Public Safety.
HB 14-1009 Change Wildfire Mitigation Tax Deduction
This bill would change the wildfire mitigation income tax deduction to an income tax credit, reducing taxes dollar for dollar up to $2,500.
SB 14-045 Responsibility of Local Officials Wildland Fire Management
This bill would amend current provisions specifying the authority and responsibility among state and local officials in regards to wildfire management.
SB 14-077 Concurrent Jurisdiction over USFS & BLM Land
This bill would allow the state to retain concurrent legislative jurisdiction with the federal government on U.S Forest Service and U.S. Bureau of Land Management land within the state.
This bill would protect public agencies intending to protect private property from civil liability.
Renewed Funding for the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program
The Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration (CFLR) program has again been fully funded with $40 million for FY14. The CFLR program is a federal program designed to provide funding for collaborative groups around the nation to restore forest health by removing the unnatural build-up of brush and small diameter trees, which can fuel megafires. 145 local, regional, and national level stakeholders from 22 states are working on landscape-scale restoration projects driven by science-based practices. The program is helping to make our forests healthier, protect our watersheds, improve ecological conditions, and infuse funds into local economies on a broad scale. The program is funding forest restoration projects along the Front Range in the Pike and Araphaho/Roosevelt National Forests. Find out more about the national initiative on the U.S. Forest Service’s CFLRP page, and learn more about local efforts on the Front Range Roundtable website.
Report questions mitigation efforts in Black Forest
A report released by the Pikes Peak Wildfire Prevention Partners investigates the level of mitigation communities affected by the 2013 Black Forest Fire completed before the fire and how effective mitigation efforts were. KOAA 5 talks to Pikes Peak Wildfire Prevention Partners representatives and outlines legislation introduced at the state level addressing prevention and response to wildfires in their report – News 5 Guardians: Report questions mitigation efforts in Black Forest
Natural Resources Grants Database
The Colorado State Forest Service has launched a searchable database for funding opportunities related to natural resources. The database is geared toward helping community groups, educators, fire departments, businesses, government agencies, nonprofit organizations, individuals, landowners, researchers, and others interested in promoting the health of Colorado’s natural resources find funding and assistance opportunities for their projects and programs. Funding opportunities for programs in agroforestry, wildfire mitigation, watershed protection, forest health, education, and more are included in the database. The database includes more than 50 active grants and assistance programs, and more will be added as they become available. The database is free and does not require a login.
Check out this great resource at http://nrdb.csfs.colostate.edu
Lessons Learned from the Black Forest Fire
The more mitigation an area has, the better the survival odds for people, for property, for the firefighters, and for the forest itself
Take a look at this great video from the Pikes Peak Wildfire Prevention Partners about the lessons learned from the 2013 Black Forest Fire.
The Pikes Peak Wildfire Prevention Partners’ Black Forest Fire Assessment Team Report to the Governor of Colorado provides a more in depth discussion of the efficacy of defensible space and wildfire mitigation strategies in the communities affected by the 2013 Black Forest Fire.
Moving from Policy to Action
Check out this recording of “Fire Adapted Communities: Moving from Policy to Action,” with Molly Mowery, President, Wildfire Planning International and member of the Network Coordination Team of the Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network.
$2500 Wildfire Mitigation Income Tax Deduction
Pile Burning Scheduled
The Coalition for the Upper South Platte’s fuels management crews are scheduled to begin pile burning in the next few weeks.
Crews will begin burning piles located north of Divide within the Ute Lakes Fishing and Recreation Club, and east of Woodland Park at the Glen Aspen Boy Scout Camp, off of Loy Creek Road. Burning will occur as weather and conditions allow throughout the next few months.
Smoke may be visible on Highway 24, County Road 5, Highway 67, Rampart Range Road and Loy Creek Road. Smoke-sensitive residents should consider staying indoors and keeping doors, windows and outside vents closed.
Fuels management staff will post road signs around the areas affected by the pile burns and send Nixel notifications. For more information please contact the Coalition for the Upper South Platte at cusp@uppersouthplatte.org or 719.748.0033
Udall Works to Safeguard Proactive, Cost-Saving Wildfire Prevention Efforts
Udall Works to Safeguard Proactive, Cost-Saving Wildfire Prevention Efforts
Bipartisan Legislation Strengthens Colorado Communities’ Abilities to Protect Lives, Homes
As part of his longtime push to ensure firefighters have the resources they need to protect Colorado communities from wildfire, Mark Udall joined a bipartisan effort today in the U.S. Senate to modernize the funding structure for fighting and preventing wildfires. The bipartisan, money-saving bill prevents federal agencies from draining funding from proactive and cost-saving wildfire prevention programs and allows access to emergency funding to support immediate fire response.
“The cost of fighting wildfire has increased fivefold in recent years, which forces the U.S. Forest Service to cut back on forest health efforts that help prevent fires before they start. It’s robbing Peter to pay Paul — and if this cycle continues, it will only lead to more catastrophic mega-fires like the Waldo Canyon Fire, the High Park Fire and the Black Forest Fire,” Udall said. “My common-sense plan ensures that Coloradans finally have the resources we need to save lives and homes in the event of another modern mega-fire without undermining valuable fire prevention programs like hazardous fuels reduction.”
The bipartisan bill would give the U.S. Department of Interior and the U.S. Forest Service the ability to fund modern mega-fire response as natural disasters, separate from smaller wildfires. This approach would prevent the federal government from depleting its forest health and fire-mitigation efforts to pay for the costs of fighting large mega-fires, thereby keeping Coloradans more safe from devastating fires.
Udall, a senior member of the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, has been a leading voice for ensuring that Colorado and the West have adequate resources to prepare for and combat wildfire, including pressing the U.S. Forest Service to quickly adopt the Government Accountability Office’s recent recommendations on how to upgrade its air tanker fleet. Udall sent a bipartisan letter last year pressing the White House Office of Management and Budget to make wildfire prevention and hazardous fuels treatments a priority. He also led the fight to ensure the Forest Service was able to cut through red tape and secure seven next-generation air tankers. One of the next-generation air tankers Udall fought to acquire helped fight the Black Forest Fire.
Udall has been a strong supporter of using public-private partnerships to improve forest health, including biomass projects like the one Xcel Energy is pursuing. Udall also has heralded the efforts of private companies, like Montrose Forest Products, that are creating jobs by turning beetle-killed trees and other forest products into commercial lumber. He recently led a bipartisan push to urge the U.S. Department of Agriculture to partner with the timber industy to reduce wildfire risks in fire-prone areas, create jobs and strenghten forest heath.
Udall has also worked to permanently reauthorize the job-creating Stewardship Contracting authority for the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management.
Please contact Mike Saccone at 202-224-4334.
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Wildland Fire Potential Forecast
Predictive Services of the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) has released its significant wildland fire potential forecast for the period January through April 2014.
Highlights for the Rocky Mountain Area are: “Normal significant wildland fire potential is expected for January through April which indicates the Area is out of its typical fire season.”
According to the forecast, long term drought is still evident across a large portion of the Rocky Mountain Area. Aside from a persistent severe to extreme drought over southeastern Colorado into western Kansas and southwestern Nebraska, gradual improvement has been the overall trend across the Area. Average precipitation was normal to below normal across most of the Area December except above normal over much of Wyoming and southwestern South Dakota. Temperatures were below seasonal averages. For the 30 to 90 day outlook period precipitation is forecast to be near to below average across the Rocky Mountain Area, with temperatures near to below average. Higher elevation fuels this time of year are typically snow covered. Otherwise, lower elevation grasslands across the eastern Plains are cured and snow covered at times. On average for this time little or no fire activity occurs. Any fire occurrences are typically short duration and wind driven in the lower elevations, mainly over the far eastern Plains.
The National Significant Wildland Fire Potential Outlook for January-April is available at: http://www.
No Cause for Complacency
The release of this forecast calling for “Normal significant wildland fire potential” for Colorado and the rest of the Rocky Mountain Area is certainly no cause for complacency, as it is “normal” for Colorado to have large wildland fires as early as January. In fact, three times in the past 12 years the first large fire (fire involving 100+ acres or more) of the year occurred in January, and only twice did the first large fire of the year occur after April.
First Large Wildfire of the Year
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||||||
Year
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Incident Name
|
Start Date
|
Size
|
Structures
|
County
|
Cause
|
2002
|
Bent’s Old Fort/Old Trail
|
3/23/2002
|
500
|
1
|
Otero
|
Human
|
2003
|
Fitch Hill
|
3/30/2003
|
203
|
El Paso
|
Human
|
|
2004
|
Picnic Rock
|
3/30/2004
|
8,908
|
2
|
Larimer
|
Human
|
2005
|
Pattridge Park
|
1/18/2005
|
300
|
Jefferson
|
Human
|
|
2006
|
Mauricio Canyon
|
1/6/2006
|
3,825
|
15
|
Huerfano
|
Human
|
2007
|
Medano Ranch
|
6/6/2007
|
307
|
Alamosa
|
Human
|
|
2008
|
Snakeweed
|
4/14/2008
|
1,272
|
Las Animas
|
Human
|
|
2009
|
Olde Stage Fire
|
1/7/2009
|
3,008
|
3
|
Boulder
|
Other *
|
2010
|
Beaver
|
5/22/2010
|
2,641
|
San Miguel
|
Human
|
|
2011
|
Sand Creek
|
2/13/2011
|
820
|
Weld
|
Unknown
|
|
2012
|
Lower North Fork
|
3/26/2012
|
4,140
|
27
|
Jefferson
|
Human
|
2013
|
Galena
|
3/15/2013
|
1,348
|
0
|
Larimer
|
Human
|
DFPC will continue to work with its local, state and federal partners to prepare for the 2014 wildfire season with the knowledge that the first large fire of the year can occur at any time.
The next National Significant Wildland Fire Potential Outlook will be issued on February 1, 2014.