Alan Edward Klein
Member
It seems like simple construction codes like flame proof roofs and siding would go a long way.Let's put this years fire season in perspective. According to the USDA Forest Service in 1930 approximately 50 million acres burned in wildfires, while this year it will be around 10 million acres. In no way am I trying to ignore the devastation and losses felt by those on the west coast. Nor am I discounting those firefighters working hard to save life and property. What makes modern fires so devastating is just how many people live in the wild land/urban interface. People like to live in the woods. What might have once been hunting or line shacks are now multimillion dollar homes in fairly dense neighborhoods.
Every year (except this covid-19 year) my fire department in Sublette County (Wyoming) trains with BLM and Forest service firefighters to better integrate on initial attacks and fire fighting strategies. We always hold these trainings in important communities that typify the wild land/urban interface. Every year we cover the same problems: narrow roads!, limited water sources, poor home owner fire mitigation, and short-sighted home owners associations that restrict tree cutting close to homes. It is amazing how much land management around the home and neighborhoods can protect homes. My guess is that insurance companies will be the drivers to address the problems I listed.
A second factor is historical fire management practices by the Forest Service and short sighted viewpoints by some environmental groups (my personal opinion). Managed grazing, logging, and fires (letting more acres burn) can all be helpful devices to reducing under story growth and deadfall accumulation, as well as, contribute to road maintenance. I don't know about what the forests are like where you live, but most near me are dead fall messes with unnaturally close tree spacings (or so I'm told by range management experts). Grazing can be helpful, too. I've seen running fires stop dead at a forest grassy areas because it had been recently grazed by cattle. Grazing should not be eliminated but managed better. Right now out west we have a three way firing squads of ranchers, environmental groups, and federal land managers, all to the detriment of what each group wants to see - healthy rangelands and forests.