Wildfire Survivors, Experts Urge Congressional Action Ahead of Fire Season

As a potentially historic fire season threatens the West, wildfire survivors and experts urged Congress on Thursday to act quickly to prevent more devastation amid a worsening drought and rising temperatures, NBC News reports.

Members of the House Natural Resources subcommittee on national parks, forests and public lands heard sometimes emotional testimony about how to better manage forests, fight climate change and equip federal firefighters for what is likely to be another record wildfire season.

The virtual hearing wrapped up a few hours before a brush fire erupted in Southern California, forcing some residents of Ventura County to evacuate their homes.

“We’ve grown painfully accustomed to deadly and destructive blazes’ wreaking havoc throughout the West year after year,” said Rep. Russ Fulcher, R-Idaho. “However, the human cost is far greater.”

Much of the West is experiencing severe to exceptional drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, fueling concerns about another hot and dry summer.

More than 98 percent of California was experiencing some level of drought this week, compared to 42 percent this time last year. Meanwhile, about 75 percent of the West is in a “megadrought” as waterways, including the Colorado River and the Rio Grande, which supply water for millions of people and businesses, are showing low flows.

Despite warnings from experts, congressional leaders remain split over how to address the crisis. While some point to climate change, others blame forest management. Some lawmakers are pushing for federal agencies to hire more wildland firefighters, but others want states to take proactive roles in securing communities.

Rep. Joe Neguse, D-Colo., countered that Congress must stop the “drain” of federal resources to land agencies and increase the federal wildland workforce. But at the heart of the issue, Neguse said, is climate change.

“For those of us who live in the West, wildfires are one of the most immediate and obvious impacts of climate change,” he said. “Wildfires today are nearly a year-round risk, burning larger areas at higher intensity, and this is only projected to increase as the climate continues to warm.”

Neguse’s district in and around Denver was hit last year by two of the largest wildfires in Colorado’s history. The Cameron Peak Fire tore through more than 208,000 acres in Arapaho and Roosevelt national forests in Larimer and Jackson counties, as well as Rocky Mountain National Park, forcing more than 20,000 residents to evacuate. The East Troublesome Fire claimed nearly 200,000 acres and killed two people, NBC affiliate KUSA reported.

During Thursday’s hearing, Rep. Doug LaMalfa, R-Calif., slammed what he characterized as the bureaucratic quagmire that halted the project and said Congress must streamline the environmental review process.

LaMalfa is among a handful of lawmakers pushing to reclassify federal forestry technicians as wildland firefighters. Currently, seasonal workers employed by the U.S. Forest Service to fight fires do not get the same wages, benefits or protections offered to state and municipal firefighters.

In September, LaMalfa introduced the Federal Wildland Firefighter Recognition Act, which would direct the Office of Personnel Management to develop a separate and distinct wildland firefighter occupational series for employees whose main duties and responsibilities are fire prevention and suppression. The bill has been introduced several times over the years and failed. A similar bill was introduced in the Senate in 2019.

Riva Duncan, a former Forest Service officer who is the executive secretary of Grassroots Wildland Firefighters, an association that advocates for federal fire personnel, shared emotional testimony about the toll that increasingly dangerous fires are having on the men and women who dedicate their lives to protecting communities.

“People are at their breaking point, leaving a wake of mental health issues, suicides, high divorce rates and very concerning numbers surrounding high incidents of cancer and cardiovascular disease,” she said. “I have grown weary of losing great friends and colleagues, and I have grown weary with inaction.”

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