Report rips expensive decisions in California wildfire fight
Source: Associated Press
Report rips expensive decisions in California wildfire fight
By BRIAN MELLEY
December 15, 2018
LOS ANGELES (AP) When a wildfire burned across Big Sur two years ago and threatened hundreds of homes scattered on the scenic hills, thousands of firefighters responded with overwhelming force, attacking flames from the air and ground.
In the first week, the blaze destroyed 57 homes and killed a bulldozer operator, then moved into remote wilderness in the Los Padres National Forest. Yet for nearly three more months the attack barely let up.
The Soberanes Fire burned its way into the record books, costing $262 million as the most expensive wildland firefight in U.S. history in what a new report calls an extreme example of excessive, unaccountable, budget-busting suppression spending.
The report by Firefighters United for Safety, Ethics, and Ecology criticizes fire managers for not adapting their approach to the changing nature of the blaze. The nonprofit group, which gets funding from the Leonard DiCaprio Foundation and other environmental organizations, advocates ending warfare on wildfires by ecologically managing them.
The report suggests the Forest Service response was the result of a use it or lose it attitude to spend its entire budget, which had been boosted by $700 million because of a destructive 2015 fire season. The agency managed to spend nearly all its 2016 money in a less-active fire season on about half the amount of land that burned the year before.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/f92cc1767c33459c9312d6fa408cdd50