Recent fires that were lit during extreme drought and then escaped boundaries are calling into question the future of prescribed burns.
across 14,000 acres in Colorado and 18,500 acres in the Rocky Mountain region, according to federal data obtained by the Denver Post. Among those projects may be the planned burns to protect threatened water supplies for Colorado Springs and Aurora.
The suspension through this summer means Colorado agencies may not be able to take advantage of the past week’s wet spell, which brought snow in mountains that could allow prescribed fires under optimal conditions. New Mexico’s Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham this month demanded a halt and went public with her concerns about how federal agencies were conducting prescribed burns. “We’re done,” she declared at a news conference. Controlled burns have become too dangerous due to heat waves and high wind that have primed forests for big burns, she and others contend. The Forest Service must improve its practices, she said, in response to climate-induced extreme conditions.
Nationwide, the Forest Service conducts roughly 4,500 prescribed fires a year across 1.4 million acres of public land — a figure that reflects stepped-up use of prescribed fire. Moore downplayed the impact of the 90-day pause pending a review of protocols, saying the bulk of prescribed fires are conducted between September and May, when fire risks traditionally have been lower due to cooler temperatures and snow.
In New Mexico, a prescribed fire northwest of Las Vegas escaped in early April. It became part of the Calf Canyon Fire that broke out around April 19 in an area where, three months ago, another prescribed fire also was lit. Wildfires in New Mexico over the past six weeks have burned more than 311,000 acres and destroyed more than 600 homes and other structures. Costs of trying to suppress these fires were approaching $100 million – let alone compensation for damage.
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