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2002 |
Sisters
country braces for fire season Those of us who
live in the Sisters country watched the catastrophic forest fires in Colorado
and Arizona with a cold thought in mind: That could be us.
"What's going on in Colorado
and Arizona could happen here," said Sisters District Ranger Bill Anthony.
Sisters and its outlying community
are vulnerable.
We are surrounded by a forest
filled with summer campers and their fires. Stiff winds blow west to east
and could push a growing fire right into Black Butte Ranch, Camp Sherman,
Tollgate, Crossroads and on into town.
Yet Sisters is in a better
position to ward off catastrophe than many places in the mountains of
the West.
"We've done more preventative
work in Central Oregon than in some other places," Anthony said.
Foresters in the Sisters country
have been engaged in a fairly aggressive program of thinning and underburning
the forest in an effort to create a belt of "defensible space" running
north-south from the Metolius River to the southern end of the district.
They have also created islands
of defensible points around rural subdivisions, rivers and Highway 20.
The work has been done through
timber sales, through thinning projects and through prescribed burning
and mowing of undergrowth.
The work has created areas
of the forest where small timber and choking underbrush that could fuel
the movement of a big fire is reduced. The fuel reduction also results
in a healthier, more open forest.
That kind of work doesn't
happen everywhere, Anthony noted.
"The public in the Northwest
is still to a degree more supportive of active forest management than
people are on the Front Range in Colorado," he said.
And Central Oregon still has
the industrial capacity to do the work. According to Anthony, who came
to Sisters from the Boulder Ranger District in Colorado, that capacity
"has dried up" in Colorado. Even as Colorado residents become aware that
work needs to be done in the forest, there is no timber industry there
to do the job.
Anthony cautions that Oregon
is not far behind in dismantling industrial capacity.
"We are ... at risk of losing
a good portion of our industry," he said. "Mills have closed, contractors
have moved out or found other ways to make a living."
Plenty of work remains to
be done -- and the ability to do it is diminished due to lack of funding.
Part of that is attributable to a reallocation of resources to fight the
war on terrorism.
"Our ability to fund security
is going to cut into our ability to deal with other issues," Anthony said.
The effect of budget constraints
is already apparent on the ground.
"We would love to be able
to treat more acres per year," he said. "The number of acres we treat
is shrinking."
In 2001, the Sisters Ranger
District thinned, mowed, burned or otherwise treated some 6,000 acres.
In 2003, that is reduced to 4,000 to 5,000 acres.
According to Anthony, the
district should be treating between 6,000 and 8,000 acres per year. And
treated areas have to be maintained so that they don't return to dense,
overgrown conditions.
He said the district needs
to plan a new project each year to keep up with the need for fuel reduction.
Currently, the district is heading toward a planning cycle that will kick
out a project every other year.
"We've done quite a bit of
work," Anthony said. "We're still nervous. We're in better shape than
a lot of places, but we're still nervous."
The District Ranger said that,
on a scale of one to 10, his degree of security with forest conditions
in the Sisters country is at about a five. That's not so good, but it's
a lot better than his assessment of Colorado.
"If I was on the Front Range
in Colorado, it would be somewhere between zero and one," he said. Help save your home from fire Homeowners in the Sisters country can do a lot to boost the odds that their home will survive a major forest fire. "It's important for people to do defensible space work on their own private lands," said Sisters District Ranger Bill Anthony. That means clearing away pine needles and brush that accumulate near the home; cutting back trees and thinning out dense stands that can go up like a torch. Political activism is also an important defense. If communities are strongly supportive of fire prevention measures in the forests, the work has a much better chance of getting funded. "Congress will allocate dollars where they know there is political support," Anthony said. Agencies are also more likely to commit funds in places where there is a good chance that things will get done. |
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