![]()
|
|||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Forest
Service presents wildfire safety program For the last
several years, the Forest Service has devoted considerable resources to
wildfire prevention and forest health programs.
Sisters has been one of the
areas to benefit.
According to Jinny Pitman,
Fire Prevention Specialist with the Sisters Ranger District, the Forest
Service would now like to take wildfire prevention one step further.
Next week the Forest Service
will be putting together a program to help instruct local residents on
ways to increase wildfire survivability.
"The idea," said Pitman, "is
to help people who don't have a background in wildfire behavior to understand
and cope with the threat."
Pitman's fire safety "show
and tell" will be conducted at the Sisters Fire Station on Wednesday,
April 16 at 6 p.m. A similar program will be held at the Camp Sherman
Community Hall the following day, Thursday, April 17, also at 6 p.m.
Pitman will be joined by local
fire officials from the Sisters-Camp Sherman and Cloverdale Rural Fire
Protection Districts as well as state fire officials.
Richard Engstrom, of Cascade
Insurance, will discuss wildfire insurance coverage issues.
For the Forest Service, fire
programs no longer focus on fire suppression but on fire management and
wildfire prevention.
"We've kept fires small for
so many years that there's a potential for fire to become more uncontrollable
and gain momentum," Pitman said.
As a result, she explained,
the service's focus has shifted toward using controlled fires in an effort
to reduce the risk of the really big destructive wildfires.
While much of the work currently
being done is in the wildland-urban interface where homes and forests
blend together, the health of the forest system as a whole is of significant
concern.
"What affects the highlands
affects the lowlands," Pitman said.
Controlled spring burns have
already begun, although recent cold weather and moisture have thus far
limited the extent of planned burns.
Last week, personnel from
the Sisters Ranger District were able to complete one 80 acre controlled
burn off Cold Springs Road near Graham Corral, west of Sisters.
"We didn't have a lot of snow
pack this year, and the fire season will soon be upon us," said Pitman.
"It's really important for
us, as a district, to let people know that the burning season is here,"
said Pitman. "They'll see smoke in the area and should not be alarmed.
Chances are it's a controlled burn operation."
She also seeks to assure the
public that the Forest Service will be watching conditions closely and
burn only during optimal circumstances for wind, temperature and humidity.
Fire management is only one
part of the Forest Service's strategy; public education is another.
Pitman has labeled the upcoming
presentation "Increasing Your Wildfire Survivability" and plans to emphasize
the multi-agency "FireFree" program.
The FireFree effort brings
together federal, state, and local agencies to help homeowners learn to
create fire resistant zones around homes in areas subject to the potential
of wildfire (see related story, page 3).
Through the use of tree thinning,
brush removal, open spaces and removal of other combustible materials
homeowners are encouraged to help protect their own homes and neighborhoods.
Not only do fire resistant
buffers help protect individual homes, but they go a long way toward preventing
the spread of fires by giving firefighters the opportunity to attack and
extinguish flames before they become unmanageable.
In addition to describing
steps to create FireFree zones, Pitman plans to share some of the lessons
learned during the 2002 fire season and offer some prognostications on
what to expect in the 2003 fire season. |
|
|||||||