- $1 billion Empire State Building IPO: why it won't be like Facebook IPO
- In surprise move, GOP leaders admit defeat in payroll tax battle
- More than 30,000 Germans turn out against anti-piracy treaty ACTA
- Does Obama blueprint reduce budget deficit fast enough? (+video)
- Pentagon budget: Does it pit active-duty forces against retirees? (+video)
- Murdoch media crisis deepens with five new arrests
- How Pinterest combines the best parts of Facebook, Tumblr, and Etsy
- US, China face 'trust deficit' as China's heir apparent visits
Tinderbox West under drastic fire controls
Drought-caused threat of fires has caused restrictions on and whole closures of most forests in the Southwest.
(Page 2 of 2)
"The drought is exacerbating the situation, making fire conditions even more ripe," says Mark Svoboda, a climatologist at the National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln. "It caused the fire season to come much, much earlier this year some six to eight weeks earlier and that lengthens the time these areas are at risk."
So with such a dramatic risk, dramatic measures are in order, say officials.
That has led to closing whole forests: The Santa Fe National Forest, for example, has been closed for the first time since 1975; and for only the third time in 30 years, the Coconino and Tonto National Forests in Arizona have been closed.
Officials have increased firefighting resources planes, personnel, and equipment by 30 percent, says Mr. Hisenberg.
But some Southwest lawmakers say it isn't enough.
Earlier this month, senators from both parties accused the US Forest Service and Interior Department of spending too little money to rehabilitate burned acreage and remove trees that could feed fires.
Those two elements were key parts of the National Fire Plan created after the devastating 2000 fire season in which more than 8.4 million acres were burned and $2 billion was spent in firefighting.
This year, however, conditions are even worse. Thunderstorms without rain are adding to the problem.
One day last week, for example, 4,000 lightning strikes were recorded in Arizona and New Mexico. A lightning strike can set a spark that smolders weeks before erupting into fire.
But the major cause of forest fires is human. For instance, of the 464 fires in New Mexico this year, 406 were started by humans.
Even more significant is the steady flow of people who are moving further into the woods without enough knowledge about how to live with fire, say officials.
"The whole entire West is considered a fire environment," says Claudia Standish, the wildlife-urban interface specialist for the Santa Fe National Forest. "A hundred years ago, fire was allowed to function as a clean-up tool. But we can't do that anymore. Too many people are living here now." Her job is to educate the public about how to create a "fire-wise environment" around a forest home. For example: Remove or prune trees near the house; rake flammable vegetation from around the house and on the roof; don't stack fire wood next to the house.
Many businesses rely on a public that is eager to live near the forest or come for a visit and that makes closures all the more difficult. Back in Jemez Springs, at the Los Ojos restaurant Janet Holmes, vacationing from Philadelphia, says she wasn't too upset to hear about the forest closure.
But she admits: "I'm not a very big hiker. I'm more interested in the art and Indian lore. In fact, I was kind of relieved that the forest was closed so I didn't have to feel bad about not spending time there."
Page:
1 | 2



