Daily News for July 12, 2024

Today’s Takeaway

Canada to double spotted owl protected area in Southwest BC

The Tree Frog Forestry News
July 12, 2024
Category: Today's Takeaway

Canada’s proposed spotted owl recovery strategy will double protected old-growth habitat in Southwest BC. In related news: Alberta’s Swan River First Nation and Ducks Unlimited collaborate on boreal conservation; and a lawsuit is launched over Vancouver’s Stanley Park tree removal. Meanwhile: BC seeks help as heat triggers wildfire activity and evacuation alerts; and Alberta and Utah firefighters face another tough day.

In Business news, another BC community urges support for BC’s forestry sector; an Ontario biomass electricity station is one of North America’s largest; Barr Geospatial Solutions (BGS) acquires BC-based Forsite Consultants; UK’s timber import volume deficit halves; the US Hardwood Industry launches a new tool for architects; and US inflation eases further in June.

Finally, and sadly, an Idaho pilot was killed in plane crash while fighting Montana wildfire.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog Editor

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Business & Politics

Barr Geospatial Solutions Acquires Forsite Consultants: Uniting to Lead Digitally Driven Forestry Solutions

By Forsite Consultants
Geo Week News
July 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Forsite is excited to announce we are now part of the Barr GeoSpatial Solutions “BGS” group of companies. BGS is a leading provider of analytics and remote sensing to help manage and protect natural resources and critical infrastructure across North America. Other companies in the BGS group include Northwest Management Inc. (NMI) (Moscow, Idaho), Airborne Imaging (Calgary) and Barr Air Patrol (Houston). …Being part of BGS will provide Forsite the resources and market access to allow the expansion of our technology product offerings across North America and around the world. …John Drew, President of Forsite, commented, “This partnership not only broadens our reach but also enhances our capabilities with cutting-edge geospatial technologies.” …Forsite’s ownership group is enthusiastic about this partnership and have taken on equity positions in the larger entity. Forsite will continue to operate independently, with its current management team remaining in their roles.

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Finance & Economics

US Inflation Eases Further in June

By Fan-Yu Kuo
The NAHB Eye on Housing
July 11, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Both overall and core inflation continued to slow in June, as a decline in gasoline prices offset the increase in shelter costs. This is another dovish signal for future monetary policy, following a significant downward revision to the job report. Despite a slowdown in the year-over-year increase, shelter costs continue to put upward pressure on inflation, accounting for over 60% of the total increase in core inflation. While this report indicates signs of softening prices, the Federal Reserve will require further data to confirm a consistent disinflation trend toward their 2% target before considering rate cuts. …The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the Consumer Price Index (CPI) fell by 0.1% in June on a seasonally adjusted basis. This was the first monthly decline since May 2020.

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UK Timber import volume deficit halves, latest TDUK figures show

The Timber Trades Journal
July 11, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

The UK timber import market enjoyed a stronger month in April 2024, with volumes 4.7% higher than those in April 2023. The better April has reduced the deficit gap between 2024 and 2023 to 109,000m3. …In softwood imports, for example, the value of imports in the first four months of 2024 was 7% lower than during the same period in 2023, caused by a 4% reduction in volume and a 3% fall in the average price of a basket of softwood imports. Softwood plywood imports experienced probably the greatest change in sources of supply for many years. Volume in the month was around 5,000m3 higher than in April 2023, with Brazil leading the increases by supplying nearly 3,500m3 more in the month. China and Chile also supplied more, as did Uruguay and Canada. …Meanwhile, housing starts in England in Q1 2024 were 39% below Q1 2023, a fall that will naturally impact the demand for timber.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Hardwood Industry Launches New Tool for Architecture and Design Professionals

Real American Hardwood Coalition
July 11, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — The Real American Hardwood Coalition (RAHC) and the National Hardwood Lumber Association (NHLA), in partnership with the U.S. Forest Service, have launched a new website at RealAmericanHardwood.pro. The website was developed to educate architects, interior designers, and construction professionals on the attributes of Real American Hardwood® products, as well as introduce new and innovative hardwood product technologies for the built environment. …Filled with information on the uses, value, and benefits of the most commonly specified domestic hardwood species, the website also explores new ways for design/build professionals to incorporate hardwood products—such as thermally modified hardwood and cross-laminated timber—into commercial and residential spaces. A sustainability section provides visitors with data on the environmental and climate friendly qualities of hardwood products, and how they compare to alternatives, such as vinyl and steel. 

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How wind and storm surge destroy buildings and how construction might improve this perennial issue

By Mark Gokavi
Colorado State University
July 11, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West
 

COLORADO — Buildings in the paths of Atlantic Ocean hurricanes should be built on pilings with special attention to strong connection points involving roofs, walls and foundations, according to a Colorado State University faculty member and structural engineer. Michael O’Reilly, a master instructor in CSU’s Department of Construction Management, answered questions about how hurricanes destroy buildings, what can be done better in coastal construction, and if there is any structure that is “hurricane-proof.” CSU hurricane researchers have predicted a well-above-average season in 2024 with 23 named storms, 11 hurricanes and five major tropical cyclones. Hurricane Beryl reached Category 5 status July 1, the earliest a recorded Atlantic Ocean storm has hit that status….Wind affects all sides and the roof of the building in different ways. The windward wall will “feel” pressure inward; the leeward wall will feel suction outward. 

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Triodos Groenfonds finances unique wooden apartment building

Triodos Investment Management
July 11, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The Netherlands — Triodos Groenfonds co-finances the construction of The Urban Woods Delft, a unique wooden building in the City of Delft, together with Triodos Bank. The building will contain 102 energy-neutral, climate-adaptive and nature-inclusive apartments for the private rental market. The Urban Woods Delft building has a modular and demountable construction, allowing for the layout to be adjusted as need change. It will be among the tallest buildings in the Netherlands  that are made entirely of certified sustainable wood, without a concrete core. It is  constructed with a tree-saving technique and the use of biobased materials – such as cross-laminated timber and flax – greatly contributes to a lower environmental footprint. The complex will consist of eleven floors including a (bike) basement.

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Timber Square: London’s net-zero landmark project

By Iain Hoey
International Fire & Safety Journal
July 12, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

As reported by Ramtech, Timber Square is an ambitious project by Landsec aimed at achieving net-zero in London. The site, which spans over 370,000 sq ft, is safeguarded by Ramtech’s WES3 wireless fire alarm system, installed by Wingate. The development is conveniently located near London Bridge and Waterloo… The project aims to retain 85% of the existing structure and utilise cross-laminated timber, significantly reducing CO2 emissions. …Timber Square presents unique fire safety challenges due to its timber construction. …During construction, the risk is heightened because of exposed timber and other combustible materials on-site. …Wingate installed over 400 WES3 devices on-site to address these fire safety risks. The WES3 system, a fully customisable temporary wireless system, provides a simple and secure method for communicating fire and medical emergencies in complex environments.

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Forestry

‘We tried to negotiate’: Lawsuit launched over Stanley Park tree removal

By Simon Little and Alissa Thibault
Global News
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A group of four Vancouverites is suing the city over its controversial move to cut down thousands of trees in Stanley Park. The Vancouver Park Board began removing the trees in late 2023, saying they were dead or dying because of a hemlock looper moth infestation. So far, about 7,200 trees have been cut down. The civil suit, filed Thursday, alleges negligence on the part of the park board, the City of Vancouver, the city’s urban forestry manager and consulting group Blackwell and Associates. …“We believe very strongly that the defendants … have been negligent in conducting a logging operation in Stanley Park,” said Michael Caditz, one of the four self-represented plaintiffs. …It claims staff failed to cite “credible science” for why the removal is necessary, and made “no attempt to employ … less-extreme methods” or “obtain corroborating opinions” from experts other than Blackwell.

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Taylor endorses Chetwynd’s letter urging support for forestry sector

By Caitlin Coombes
Energetic City
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

TAYLOR, B.C. – The District of Taylor has joined the District of Chetwynd in supporting a letter to be sent to the BC Government regarding the province’s forestry sector. During the July 8th regular council meeting, Mayor Brent Taillefer and councillors reviewed the letter sent from Chetwynd, written in support of a May 28th letter from the District of Campbell River. “Our small community of Chetwynd has already directly experienced the permanent loss of many local jobs with the closure of our Canfor mill,” Chetwynd Mayor Allen Courtoreille wrote in the letter. The letter urges Ministry of Forests Bruce Ralston and the province to increase support for the ongoing crisis facing B.C.’s forestry sector and speaks of Chetwynd’s historic and ongoing struggles to support the industry amidst mill closures.

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Boreal Conservation in Alberta Moves Forward Through Relationships and Reconciliation

By Ducks Unlimited Canada
Cision Newswire
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

SWAN RIVER, AB — Swan River First Nation (SRFN) and Ducks Unlimited Canada (DUC) are pleased to announce the signing of a Relationship and Collaboration Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) aimed at advancing boreal forest conservation initiatives within Treaty 8 Territory. This MOU represents a significant step towards fostering a mutually respectful and collaborative partnership dedicated to preserving the ecological and cultural integrity of the boreal forest while integrating the deep knowledge and experience Swan River residents hold in the local landscape. Under this MOU, key projects will blend SRFN’s Indigenous Knowledge with DUC’s scientific expertise, building a more sustainable environment. Projects include the development of a wetland field guide and climate change modeling initiatives, which will integrate Indigenous content and perspectives.

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Campfire bans coming into effect this weekend throughout B.C.

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
July 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Following a stretch of high temperatures and several heat warnings throughout the province, and with potentially challenging wildfire weather forecast, the BC Wildfire Service is implementing a campfire ban in all parts of B.C., except Haida Gwaii. The ban will take effect at noon (Pacific time) on Friday, July 12, 2024, and will remain until further notice. The ban is being implemented to help prevent human-caused wildfires and help protect public safety. The category 1 (campfires) ban is in addition to current provincewide bans for category 2 and 3 fires. This means open fires of any size, except those licensed for prescribed burns, will be prohibited everywhere in B.C., outside of Haida Gwaii. Anyone found in contravention of an open-burning prohibition may be issued a violation ticket for $1,150, may be required to pay an administrative penalty of up to $10,000 or, if convicted in court, may be fined up to $100,000 and/or sentenced to one year in jail. 

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B.C. seeking outside firefighting help as heat triggers eruption of wildfire activity

The Canadian Press in the Kelowna Daily Courier
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER – British Columbia’s emergency management minister says the province is proactively working to secure extra firefighters to deal with what she called the “potential for a drastically accelerated wildfire situation.” Bowinn Ma told a briefing on Thursday that B.C. was seeking out-of-province help from six unit crews representing about 180 specialized wildfire fighters. Ma said about 500 of the province’s full complement of 2,000 firefighters were currently deployed, but the province was seeking outside help early as the situation worsened due to a heat wave and ongoing dry conditions. …Wildfire activity has been erupting in recent days, with about 150 active wildfires in B.C., up from fewer than 100 at the start of the week. Ma said most were in the Cariboo and northeast regions, and while some of the the province had benefited from cooler and wetter weather in May and June, the fire season was “well underway” in the north.

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Feds propose to protect critical spotted owl habitat 1,000 times the size of Stanley Park

By Sarah Cox
The Narwhal
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Twenty-one years after the spotted owl was listed as endangered under Canada’s Species at Risk Act, the federal government released a proposed recovery strategy identifying critical habitat for the old-growth forest dependent owl. The strategy reinstates about 200,000 hectares of the owl’s critical habitat in southwest B.C. that was quietly erased from maps in a draft recovery strategy last year. …The updated recovery strategy includes an additional 200,000 hectares of spotted owl critical habitat that was not erased from maps — for a total of 416,258 hectares of critical habitat on federal and non-federal lands. The environmental law charity Ecojustice, non-profit conservation group the Wilderness Committee and Spô’zêm First Nation hailed the updated recovery strategy as a “game-changer for conservation efforts” for the spotted owl and a “historic win.” …The release of the proposed recovery strategy launches a 60-day consultation period. A final recovery strategy will be published once consultations are complete.

Additional coverage by Stefan Labbé, the Wilderness Committee, Ecojustice, and the Government of Canada Strategy document.

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This University of Idaho research could change how we manage our forests

By Mia Maldonado
The Idaho Capital Sun
July 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Just as the microorganisms in the human gut play a crucial role to our well-being, microorganisms in forests are essential to forest stability. Researchers at the University of Idaho are working to understand exactly how those microorganisms respond when faced with stressors, such as drought and wildfires, and what their role could be in helping trees survive. Principal investigator Tara Hudiburg, who is leading the project, is a professor in the university’s forest, rangeland and fire science department. This year she and her research team received a six-year, $15 million grant from the National Science Foundation to study how microorganisms in Idaho forests respond to stress and how they rely on each other to survive. …The project – coined EMBER, or the Embedding Molecular Biology in Ecosystem Research – can help scientists and forest managers better understand which of those microorganisms can help tree species endure harsh conditions under a warming climate.

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Mount Hood National Forest prohibits campfires, Oregon wildfire danger increases

By Emma Logan
The Salem Statesman Journal
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

As warm and dry weather is forecast to stick around, fire danger begins to increase in forests across the state. Here is where campfire bans and fire danger levels stand across forests. Mount Hood National Forest prohibits all campfires. Beginning Friday, all fires will be prohibited in Mount Hood National Forest. This includes all campfires, charcoal or briquette fires, pellet fires and any other open fires. Portable cooking stoves, lanterns and heating devices using liquefied or bottled fuel are still allowed as long as they can be instantly switched off. Mount Hood National Forest is the first to announce a total fire ban in the state. Oregon’s hot weather has caused fire danger to rise and with the dry and warm long-term forecast, the risk for wildfire increases. Fire personnel anticipate the potential for fires to continue to remain high through the season, the agency said in a news release.

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A history of fire in the Bighorn National Forest

By Alex Hargrave
Buffalo Bulletin
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Early in its tenure, the U.S. Forest Service took a hardline stance on wildfires: prevention. And thus Smokey Bear was born. …While this public relations campaign is still popular today —  the attitude toward suppressing all fires has changed. Scientists have learned that fire is good for forests, to a certain extent. But, in May 2022, the U.S. Forest Service paused and began to review its prescribed fire program in response to several prescribed burns escaping and causing damaging wildfires in other parts of the U.S. Before then, Bighorn National Forest fire management officer Jon Warder said, crews purposefully burned up to 2,000 acres per year in the forest. …The practice is borrowed from Native American tribes who first inhabited the lands that are now national forests or parks. According to the National Park Service, “cultural burning” refers to the Indigenous practice of “the intentional lighting of smaller, controlled fires…

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Atikokan is on the upswing: mayor

By Clint Fleury
Northwestern Ontario News Watch
July 11, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

ATIKOKAN – Owned by Ontario Power Generation, the Atikokan Generating Station is part of the province’s commitment to phase out coal and create economic stability in the region. This year the Atikokan Generating Station’s contract with the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) was set to expire on July 23. Todd Smith, the Minister of Energy before Premier Doug Ford shuffled his cabinet, directed the IESO to negotiate a new five-year contract. The mayor of Atikokan, Rob Ferguson, said he’s very excited. …Atikokan Generating Station produces 205 megawatts of biomass electricity, making the station one of North America’s largest biomass facilities and consumers of industrial wood pellets in Canada. Without a new contract, the facility would have likely been decommissioned. In its absence, the economic impact would be catastrophic.

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Health & Safety

U.S. Heat Wave Stretches Into Another Day, and Starts to Move East

By Isabelle Taft and Judson Jones
The New York Times
July 12, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

A stubborn heat wave that has engulfed much of the Western United States for more than a week continued to linger over the region on Friday, with triple-digit temperatures expected to stretch into the weekend for millions of Americans. In the Denver area, a heat advisory was in effect through the weekend, with the National Weather Service predicting record-breaking temperatures for both Saturday and Sunday. The heat will subside in the West this weekend, but it isn’t going away. Before Saturday, another up to two-dozen daily records could be broken to begin the weekend. “This long-duration heat wave remains extremely dangerous and deadly if not taken seriously,” a forecaster with the Weather. …The extreme heat will push into the Midwest and Eastern U.S. by early next week, with heat indexes as high as 110 degrees expected in the Philadelphia area and in the low 100s in New York. [to access the full story a NY Times subscription is required]

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Pilot employed by Idaho company killed in plane crash while fighting Montana wildfire

By Elizabeth Walsh
Idaho Statesman
July 11, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

MONTANA — A 45-year-old female pilot who was employed by an Idaho-based company died Wednesday in a plane crash while responding to a fire in Montana, according to the Lewis and Clark County Sheriff’s Office in Montana. The human-caused Horse Gulch Fire began Tuesday outside of Helena, Montana, and has burned more than 1,000 acres in the Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. The Sheriff’s Office identified the pilot as Juliana Turchetti, an employee of Dauntless Air. The aerial firefighting company works with wildland firefighters and was on loan from Idaho to the U.S. Forest Service to help contain the fire, Idaho Gov. …Turchetti’s plane crashed into a mountainside and landed in Hauser Lake, according to the Sheriff’s Office. …Turchetti was the only person on the plane. The National Transportation Safety Board will lead the investigation into what caused the crash.

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Forest Fires

‘We were not prepared’: Canada fought nightmarish wildfires as smoke became US problem

By Keith Matheny
The Detroit Free Press
July 11, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, United States

…Calling Canada’s wildfires in 2023 unprecedented doesn’t capture the magnitude of what happened, said Michael Flannigan, a professor specializing in wildland fire at Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, British Columbia. …To begin to understand Canada’s wildfire threat, first understand the vastness of Canada’s forests. With about 1.4 million square miles of forest land, Canada is the third-most forested country in the world, trailing only Russia and Brazil. Canada’s forest is 15 times the surface area of all of the Great Lakes combined. …”People around the world probably don’t really comprehend just the scale of the forested area that we have,” said Richard Carr, a physical scientist and fire research analyst with the Canadian Forest Service in Edmonton….The total cost of the 2023 wildfires across Canada in damage, response and recovery, is still being calculated. “It’s into the billions of dollars,” said Harjit Sajjan, Canada’s minister of emergency preparedness. 

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Lightning sparks more wildfires in northern Alberta as firefighters face another tough day

CBC News
July 11, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Slightly cooler temperatures are moving into central and northern Alberta where firefighters are still battling multiple out-of-control wildfires including several new ones in the Fort McMurray forest area caused by an overnight lightning storm. Officials with the ministries of Forestry and Parks and Public Safety and Emergency Services provided an update Thursday afternoon along with Alberta Wildfire. …The province is receiving help from other provinces via the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. Approximately 140 firefighters have come in from Ontario and New Brunswick to assist Alberta firefighters.  Firefighters are managing to minimize the growth of the largest blaze in the Cattail Lake Complex wildfire burning eight kilometres northeast of Suncor’s Firebag production site and about 70 kilometres northeast of Fort McMurray, at 28,000 hectares.

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Hundreds on evacuation alert as new wildfires sparked across B.C.

CBC News
July 11, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Hundreds of people in B.C.’s Interior and north have been told to be ready to leave their homes at a moment’s notice as dozens of new wildfires have sparked across the province. Residents of Wells, in the Cariboo region, as well as rural residents south of Dawson Creek, in the province’s northeast, have been placed under evacuation alert due to the potential risk of wildfire to homes and lives. An alert means residents must be ready to leave at a moment’s notice. Fires have also closed an ancient rainforest park in the B.C. Interior. In response, the province is seeking outside help to aid crews in tackling the more than 150 fires currently burning across the province. …The majority of new fires are in the Prince George and Cariboo fire districts, where the B.C. Wildfire Service’s map shows a cluster of about two dozen new fires sparked in the Cariboo region east of Quesnel.

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Utah’s still-burning Silver King wildfire is one of the biggest in the nation

By Abigail Gray and Megan Banta
The Salt Lake Tribune
July 11, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

At nearly 15,000 acres, the Silver King Fire ripping through Fishlake National Forest is one of the biggest actively burning wildfires in the nation. At least two active wildfires in the West are bigger: The Lake Fire (2024) northeast of Los Olivos, California, was burning about 34,015 acres as of Thursday, and the Wilder Fire in Humboldt County, Nevada, had grown to 16,830 acres. Both started within days of the Silver King Fire, but they are at least partially contained — the Lake Fire is 16% contained, and the Wilder Fire is 40% contained. Another wildfire near Ruidoso, New Mexico, has burned more than 17,500 acres since June 17 but is nearly completely contained.

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100 human-caused wildfires since June

By US FOREST SERVICE Pacific Northwest Region
Herald and News
July 12, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND — Since June, there have been 100 human-caused wildfires on national forests and grasslands in Oregon and Washington, according to a news release from the US Forest Service. While firefighters have been largely successful in putting out these preventable fires, the extremely hot and dry conditions are significantly ramping up fire danger across the region. “We’re entering a very dangerous time period in the Pacific Northwest wildfire season,” said Ed Hiatt, Pacific Northwest Assistant Fire Director for Operations. “Combined with recent heat, we’re preparing for the potential of dry lightning and gusty winds across much of eastern Oregon.” Local responders are closely tracking these deteriorating conditions where any new wildfire will have the potential to spread rapidly and burn intensely right from the star, the release said. And as firefighters are responding to lightning-sparked fires a preventable, human-caused wildfire can limit availability of needed engines, dozer, helicopters, and other resources.

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