Effort Launched to Reduce the Risk of
Wildfires in the Wildland Urban Interface
Wildfires in the Wildland Urban Interface
President Obama has made clear that
climate change is one of the greatest threats facing our country and our
planet. With a changing climate comes more extreme weather, including droughts
and wildfires.
The increase in wildfires is
particularly dangerous in the Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI), where houses,
structures and people are at risk of structure loss, injury and
death. Since 1990, 60 percent of new homes built in the United States have
been built in the WUI, increasing the amount of land at risk in the by 4,000
acres per day, nearly 2 million acres per year. The WUI now contains 46 million
single family homes, several hundred thousands of businesses, and a population
of more than 120 million.
Many of the homes and businesses located
in the WUI are at greater risk from wildfire because of the impacts of climate
change, threatening both structures and lives. It’s essential that we recognize
the climate impacts on fire risks in these areas, and that we’re doing all we
can to share information about these risks with fire professionals and
community leaders. To better combat these fire risks, we need to increase our
understanding of how wildfires interact with communities in terms of
structures, terrain, and weather. Together, we must take action to enhance
community resilience against these risks.
Today, Vice President Biden, in
partnership with the U.S. Fire Administration and other Federal partners, is
hosting a Fire Chiefs’ White House Roundtable with chiefs from across the
nation to discuss the scientific basis for climate impacts and WUI fire
threats, review lessons from recent fire events and practices employed to
address these threats, and identify further policy actions needed to enhance
community resilience in the WUI. At the roundtable, the following announcements
will be made:
A Commitment from Fire Chiefs
Across the Country to Combat Climate Change Impacts in the Wildland Urban
Interface: Over
37 fire chiefs and professional fire associations from local and tribal
communities, counties, states and federal agencies have committed to ensure
that fire fighters have the information, training and resources required to
face the current and growing threats that climate impacts are having at the
WUI, and to ensure community resilience by encouraging wildland fire prevention
and mitigation practices by property owners, communities, and local governments
across the country. The fire chiefs represent the following communities and
organizations:
Chief of Fire and Aviation, Alaska Division of Forestry, Alaska
Fire Chief, Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation
Fire Department, Arizona
Fire Chief, Mesa Fire and Medical
Department, Mesa Arizona
Fire Chief, Salt River Pima - Maricopa
Indian Community, Arizona
Fire Chief, City of Oakland, California
State Fire Marshal, State of California
Fire Chief, Pasadena Fire Department,
California
Fire Chief, Fire and Rescue Division,
Office of Emergency Services, California
Fire Chief, Orange County Fire
Authority, California
Fire Chief, County of Los Angeles,
California
Fire Chief, North County Fire Protection
District, Fallbrook (San Diego), California
Director, California Department of
Forestry and Fire Protection, California
Fire Chief, Cunningham Fire Protection
District, Colorado
Deputy Fire Chief, Castle Rock Fire and
Rescue Department, Colorado
Fire Marshal, Colorado Springs, Colorado
Fire and EMS Chief, D.C. Fire and EMS,
Washington, D.C.
Fire Chief, Lakeland Fire Department,
and President, Florida Fire Chiefs Association, Florida
State Forester, State of Florida
Fire Chief, Caldwell, Idaho
Fire Chief, Kansas City Kansas Fire
Department, Kansas
Fire Chief, Red Lodge Fire Rescue,
Montana
Fire Chief (Interim), Lincoln, Nebraska
Fire and Rescue, Nebraska
Fire Chief, City of Omaha Fire
Department, Nebraska
State Forester, State of Nevada
Fire Chief, City of Santa Fe, New Mexico
and Chair, IAFC Wildland Fire Policy Committee
Fire Chief, Tualatin Valley Fire &
Rescue, Oregon
Fire Chief, City of Austin, Texas
Fire Chief (Acting), City of Fairfax
Fire Department, Virginia
Fire Chief, Stafford County Fire and
Rescue Department, Virginia
Chief of Emergency Services, County of
Lancaster, Virginia
Fire Chief, Cowlitz 2 Fire and Rescue,
Kelso, Washington
Fire Chief, Tualatin Valley Fire
& Rescue, Washington
Fire Chief, Kittitas Valley Fire and
Rescue, Ellensburg, Washington
U.S. Fire Administrator
Chief Executive Officer and Executive
Director, International Association of Fire Chiefs
Western Fire Chiefs Association
(AK, AZ, CA, HI, ID, MT, NV, OR, UT, WA,
and Western Pacific Islands)
Wildland Fire Coordinator, International
Association of Fire Chiefs
A New Study Illustrating the Need to be More Prepared: The Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) today announced the release of “A Case Study of a Community Affected by the Waldo Fire-Event Timeline and Defensive Actions”. This case study demonstrates the WUI fire event attributes that differ from either urban or wildland fires, including the extreme and rapid rates of structure ignition, and provides recommendations for planning and operational considerations before, during, and after fires in the WUI.
A Report on Understanding the Science Behind Wildland Fires: A Wildland Fire Science and Technology Task Force, chartered under the National Science and Technology Council’s Subcommittee on Disaster Reduction, is releasing a Final Report that proposes mechanisms to improve coordination between fire-science producers and the community of users of fire science, including a recommendation to establish a standing Federal Fire Science Coordination Council to define national-level needs for Federal fire science in support of the fire-management community. The proposed Council will also will serve as a formal, institutionalized mechanism to systematically link fire researchers with fire managers.
To continue to address wildfire risk, including risks in the WUI, the President’s FY 2016 Budget proposal would provide the necessary resources for the U.S. Forest Service as well as the Department of the Interior to address wildfire suppression and rehabilitation needs without resorting to detrimental transfers from other critical forest landscape resilience priorities. As more and more agency resources are spent each year to provide the firefighters, aircraft, and other assets necessary to protect lives, property, and natural resources from catastrophic wildfires, fewer and fewer funds and resources are available to support other agency work -- including the very programs and restoration projects that reduce the fire threat on public and private land.
Source: The White House, Office of the Press Secretary
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