Tuesday, September 30, 2014


#Wildfires
#Forestry

Reposted from SURVIVALBASED:

NORTHWEST WILDFIRES AND THE ‘GREEN’ ENVIRONMENTALIST
   





Posted on September 8, 2014 by Capt. William E. Simpson
Pacific Northwest Wildfire Sky

As I write this I am vexed by the fact that nearly 100,000 thousand acres of pristine forests are burning and nearly one-million acres of forest (public forests) have burned to the ground in and around the Pacific Northwest so far this year alone. The vast majority of these forests are publically owned and managed by Federal agencies under the overview of the EPA (http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2014/07/northwest_wildfires_more_than.html).



wildfires - tree in flames

As a result of the flames, heat and smoke, thousands of forest animals have died and many others are suffering with severe injuries and their habitat is now long-gone. Wildfires are indiscriminate killers of endangered species, as well as numerous other species of birds and many other forest animals. It’s impossible to put an economic value on a forest full of life; but having said that; and simply from a renewable resource point of view, just the trees that have been lost had an economic (timber) value in excess of a billion dollars!




scorched earth
Photo: The scorched-earth devastation of just a small fire is obvious

The EPA, BLM, U.S. Forestry and their environmentalist (‘Green’) support base claim that they want to preserve habitat and save endangered species, but by way of their own actions, policies and regulations, more habitat and species have been lost over the past decades under their management policies than were lost ever before, and are being lost, every year, year after year at an alarming rate!
Albert Einstein once said that the definition of insanity is; doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results…
So the question is why are we losing so much forest? And the answer is very simple… the forests are being mismanaged through the continued bungling-intervention of the EPA, the ‘environmentalists’ and the ‘green’ movement into the arena of forestry.
I know something about the subject of forests and forest management since I grew-up living, working, hunting and fishing in the area of the forests that are being consumed by these incredibly massive fires, which have become a recurring annual theme over the past two and a half decades since the intervention of the ‘environmentalist’ into the area for forest management practices. But who are these ‘environmentalists’ anyway.

Generally speaking (and there are exceptions), the ‘environmentalists’ who have taken an interest in controlling how our public forests are used don’t live in the forests, and they view the human race (you, me our families and friends) as less valuable and relevant than a frog, fish, or a tree. They are people who seem to lack an understanding of the principals of renewable manageable resources, and who have become activists against those who would use the public forests responsibly, having had relatively little (if any) time and relevant experience living in or working in our forests themselves. Many of them are aligned with the concepts and principals of the ‘progressive’ socialist movement. If you debate them, many of these same people will quickly remind you of their ‘degrees’, etc…  In other words, they are telling you that they ‘know it all’, and certainly more than you. However, anyone who has successfully managed a forest knows (as is seen in privately owned and managed  forests) that reading some books in college and going on a few field trips just doesn't cut it; a piece of paper hanging on the wall is no substitute for actual experience that is gained over many generations of successful forest management. No more so than someone trying to be a farmer with the same token experience… it just doesn't work.

And coincidentally, many of the books that some universities are using in their forestry programs are authored by some of the same ‘green’ environmentalist forest managers who have had a hand in developing the current failed forest management polices as applied over the past two decades; just look what’s happening! Books and lectures simply cannot teach common sense or instill the on-the-ground experience that loggers and foresters develop over the span of their lives, and through generation after generation of families working in the woods. There’s just no debating when it comes to the contrast between the current recurring disaster management model, and the past successes in forest management with sustainable and renewable timber harvests, combined with abundant wildlife habitat; without the mammoth annual fires we are experiencing today.
Here (the link just below) is an important (precedent example) of how proper forest management, which includes selective logging and other proper management practices, saved a forest and stopped a major wildfire: http://cronkitenewsonline.com/2011/12/experts-decades-of-logging-treatments-helped-stop-wallow-fire-at-reservation/




wildfires - selectively logged forest
Photo of a tract of fire resistant forest that has been selectively logged

In the early 1970’s I worked in the woods logging and then later worked as a millwright for Southern Oregon Plywood. My brothers were also loggers as were many of my friends and countless others who lived in Southern Oregon. Like farmers who tended to their fields and cared for them year after year, and who depended upon those fields and the resulting crop production, loggers cared for the forests; they had to; forests were the lifeline for their family’s financial security.

Loggers and their families also spent a lot of time in the woods even when they weren't working; they hunted and fished in the forests for generations. And through that continual close contact with the forest and the wildlife, loggers gained more knowledge about the forests and the animals that lived there than many of the scientists, giving them a unique understanding of the intricate and complex interactions of the biodiversity that exists in the forests.
As just one example of the many successful practices of loggers; dead and dying trees and underbrush (fuel for fires) were removed and eliminated during selective harvesting of the forests, and in the process of harvests, small access roads were made, which served as fire breaks and access for firefighters in the event of a fire. During that time and preceding decades, back when loggers were allowed to log public forests, fires that burned hundreds of thousands and millions of acres of timber were very rare, almost non-existent. And that was because the forests were healthy and the density of the forest and the underbrush were kept to a minimum as a result of proper management and continued annual harvests. Forests were managed as a sustainable and renewable resource, which in turn benefited the wildlife with sustainable reliable habitat and in the process, also provided recreational opportunities for the people. That former relationship between loggers and the forest was truly symbiotic.

I can still recall the spotted owl debacle, where loggers, who for all intents and purposes were the caretakers of the forests were completely closed-out of the public forests in wholesale fashion as a result of the ‘green’ movement and environmentalists! All logging came to a complete halt as well as the associated management practices. This resulted in the shutdown of numerous West Coast lumber mills and the loss of tens of thousands of jobs in and related to the timber industry which was thereafter decimated.
During the lobby by the ‘green movement’ and environmentalists, they argued that the rate of logging prior to the 1990’s would eliminate the old growth forests… here is a quote:
“Environmentalists admit that saving the owls' habitat could cost jobs. But, they argue, these jobs will vanish no matter what. For if cutting continues at its current rate of 125,000 acres a year, the old-growth forests will be gone within thirty years and the mills forced to close anyhow.”  
(taken from this article: http://www.scu.edu/ethics/publications/iie/v4n1/ ).

However, as we have all witnessed, since the transition to the ‘green movement’s’ ban on logging in public forests, we are in fact actually losing many hundreds of thousands of acres of forest annually!  It’s a travesty of monumental proportions… when people like these try to play God, the results are usually tragic and harm both humanity and the wildlife.

Through the use of politics combined with bad science the ‘green movement’ and environmentalists led the way to the implementation of seriously flawed policies (regulations) and practices. The EPA and the BLM along with Federal forestry agencies and their environmentalist support base had in the early 1990’s effected a major management policy change in order to supposedly save forest habitat for a species of owl (spotted owl) that was ‘allegedly’ endangered (http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19930114&slug=1679945)
Result: In the early 1990’s Federal forests became off-limits to loggers.

Of course under the ‘new management’ practices of the environmentalist-led EPA, BLM and Federal Forestry Departments, the forests became (and are) very seriously overgrown leading to unhealthy stands of trees (with dead and dying trees) that were vulnerable to disease, insects and of course fire, as did the underbrush.

Forests became so dense that if a fire started (regardless of reason)… the fire would burn extremely hot and spread very fast; it’s so simple a child can understand the concept… more fuel, more forest fire.

And at the end of the day, many years later after Feds and the ‘green’ environmentalists kicked the loggers out of the forests and took-over, placing ‘their’ policies, regulations and management practices into place, the spotted owl population has continued to drop! This is irrefutable evidence that their interventions, policies and regulations have utterly failed to affect the owls, and in that failure, the public interest has lost even more animals and habitat to fire! Through their own actions, we now have even more animals heading towards potential extinction! What a contradiction to the claims of these people!

Under the ‘green environmental’ forest management polices/practices (‘hands off, no logging’), forests have become so dense that when lightning starts a fire, instead of just burning-off a relatively small area before the fire is brought under control, as it was in the days of managed logging, fires today now burn entire tracks of forests amounting to hundreds of thousands of acres annually, all of which is burned to the bare ground!

Let’s keep in the mind that this is now the new ‘norm’, and since it takes many decades for the trees to be re-established, the net result is that we are losing more and more forest annually, instead of gaining more forest area and wildlife habitat; just the opposite of what the environmentalists and the EPA preach to the public. So what’s the point?

You don’t need to be a rocket scientist to figure this one out…. Just look at the annual total acres that are burned to the ground… It’s truly shocking that this is even allowed to continue as it has, year after year.
wildfires - ashes





Photo: Ashes from Federally managed forests burning is covering the cars in several communities.

So much for the ‘habitat’ of the spotted owl! And of course the habitats for dozens of other species were (are) lost as well. As of this writing, I am down in the area of the fires interviewing local people, and hundreds of thousands of acres of ‘critical habitat’ (old growth and other trees) has been converted to the ash that is falling from the sky; it’s like a nuclear winter without the radiation. Ash from the burned forests is covering entire cities!

It’s a fact that under the continued management of the public’s forest lands by the same idiotic policies, we now have annual forest fires that devastate huge areas of forest, and in the process destroy all of the trees, as opposed to having some of the trees harvested resulting in a healthy forest as had existed in the past; forests which then were also more fire-resistant. Some may try to argue that the fires are a result of the drought. Of course that’s a ruse to deflect blame from the implementation of a seriously flawed management policy. In the prior era of managed forest harvests, we also had periods of severe drought, without the results we are seeing today. Added to which, forests which are selectively logged and managed are far more fire resistant, drought or not, and that fact is undeniable.
So which method makes more sense? Sustainable logging as it was successfully practiced for nearly a century; or…. The current ‘green environmentalist’ methods where no logging is allowed in public forests resulting in hundreds of thousands of acres of forests regularly burning to the ground leaving nothing but ash and bare ground that is devoid of plant life and subject to severe erosion?

The erosion of the scorched earth in-turn leads to excessive silt run-off into the streams and rivers, which covers the critical gravel beds in the streams and rivers that are required for the fish eggs of spawning fish such as Salmon. Of course the recent decline in Salmon and Steelhead runs are certainly associated to this situation. Additionally, the loss of forests results in the loss of critical shade trees in and around watersheds, which results in the warming of stream and river water temperatures; this also adversely affects the fish populations.

The late Summer and Fall storms of the Pacific Northwest which spawn the lightning that ignite the forests also provide the downpours that wash the silt into the streams and rivers that resulted from the aftermath of the massive forest fires. And this silting of the waterways comes at the worst possible time… just as the Salmon are moving upriver to spawn in the gravel beds of the rivers and streams. However, with the overburden of silt that has washed-down off the now barren mountain sides, the gravel beds are covered in silt and are no longer viable for the spawning Salmon. This is not an optimal situation for the spawning Salmon; in fact, it can cause entire runs of Salmon to fail in their efforts to reproduce! As a fisherman myself, this situation is beyond frustrating.

As anyone can easily see, the relative newcomer green environmentalist-scientists have it all wrong, and every year since the implementation of their fatally flawed concepts and polices we watch as more and more forests are consumed by massive fires such as those that are burning as I write this.

If these forests were properly managed and logged as they were just 30 years ago in the Pacific Northwest, we would have trees still standing and abundant animal habitat in areas that are now burned to the dirt, and we would have renewable forest harvests as in the past providing full-time jobs for thousands of people. And as it was in the past, healthy standing forests shading the watersheds and minimized erosion, providing optimal water temperatures and low water turbidity in the streams and rivers resulting in abundant runs of fish, something that local Indian tribes greatly desire.

Instead, thanks to the intervention of the EPA, the ‘green movement’ and environmentalists, we have less and less forest, which leads to less and less water, and less fish, while the good people of Siskiyou, Jackson, Josephine and Klamath Counties are suffering from record high un-employment as they watch helplessly as billions of dollars of timber is turned to ash each year.

And in the end, with the forests burned to the ground, if a few spotted owls survive the blaze, the spotted owl has no trees and no habitat.  So what was the point?




Life is hard...it's even harder if you're stupid


It just doesn't get any dumber than this.  We have the blind leading the blind.
Thinking Americans need to stand-up to the current stupidity and form a united front against the idiots who think they know what’s best for everyone else, our natural resources, our schools and our local Counties.


wildfires - smokey sky
Photo: Smoke from a massive wildfire pollutes the pristine mountain air of Northern California

How long can America survive the obtuse policies of ‘green environmentalism’?

Some readers might be thinking; why should I care? Or, how does this affect me since I live across the U.S. from these wildfires. We all need to care and take action because this kind of mismanagement can happen anywhere environmentalists stick their noses into areas where they have less than adequate experience. As I write this, and as a result of yet another environmentalist intervention, numerous perfectly good West Coast dams are being eyed for removal! Of course this makes perfect sense to these upside-down thinking people, especially given that the West Coast is seriously short on water as it is, and needs more dams, not less!
Are we going to wait until these clowns let it all burn?
Cheers!  Bill
Capt. William E. Simpson – USMM
http://www.WilliameSimpson.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/NauticalPrepper







Why conservationists need a little hope: saving themselves from becoming the most depressing scientists on the planet

The many positive stories


INNOVATION IN TROPICAL FOREST CONSERVATION SERIES
Despite decades of attention and advocacy, tropical forests are still falling at rapid rates worldwide. Now, mongabay.com's new special series, Innovation in Tropical Forest Conservation aims to highlight solutions to the crisis through short interviews with some of the world's leading conservation scientists, practitioners, and thinkers about new and emerging approaches to conservation. For more of these interviews, please check our Innovation in Tropical Forest Conservation feed.


 NEXT BIG IDEA IN FOREST CONSERVATION ?
Integrating forest conservation, use, and restoration
Liz Kimbrough, special to mongabay.com 
January 10, 2014



Reposted from Mongabay:

PART 1
INNOVATION IN TROPICAL FOREST CONSERVATION:
Q&A WITH ROBIN CHAZDON


Rainforest near La Selva, Costa Rica. Photo by Rhett A. Butler.


Dr. Robin Chazdon has dedicated over 30 years to studying and working in tropical forests. Her research interests include biodiversity conservation, regeneration and restoration of tropical forests, and biodiversity in human-modified tropical landscapes. 

Currently, Chazdon is a professor at the University of Connecticut in the US, heading a multi-investigator project on long-term secondary forest dynamics in Costa Rica, Mexico, Panama, and Brazil. She is also the director of the recently funded Tropical Reforestation Research Coordination Network (PARTNERS). 

Among her laundry list of accomplishments, she has served as Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Biotropica, as President of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation, and as a member-at-large of the governing board of the Ecological Society of America. She is an author of over 100 peer-reviewed scientific articles, the co-editor of two books, and the mother of two grown musicians. 

In January 2014, she will become the Executive Director of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC), and her sole-authored book “Second growth: The promise of tropical forest regeneration in an age of deforestation” will be published in May 2014. 

An Interview with Dr. Robin Chazdon 

Mongabay: What is your background? 

Robin Chazdon: I was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. Went to Grinnell College where I majored in biology. During my second year I spent 6 months in Costa Rica on an off-campus field studies program, which changed my life! After that experience I decided to become a tropical forest ecologist and to dedicate myself to understanding and conserving tropical forests. I got my PhD at Cornell University and returned to the tropics to study the ecology of understory palms at La Selva Biological Station. After three postdocs in the Bay Area, I got a faculty job in the Dept. of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Connecticut, where I have been teaching and mentoring students since 1988 (25 years now). I have taught General Ecology, Methods of Ecology (advanced field-based course), Functional Ecology of Plants, and graduate seminars on Current Topics in Biodiversity. Since 1992 I have been studying forest succession in northeastern Costa Rica, and since 2007 have been coordinating a multi-investigator project to study successional pathways in forests of Costa Rica, Brazil, and Mexico. 

Mongabay: How long have you worked in tropical forest conservation and in what geographies? What is the focus of your work? 

Robin Chazdon: My work in tropical forest conservation has largely coincided with my research on forest regeneration, beginning about 20 years ago. Witnessing the recovery of forests in areas that were cleared and used for pasture and agriculture has made me realize the potential for incorporating regenerating forests into regional conservation programs. So, rather than seeing these forests as degraded counterparts to "primary" forests, they can be viewed as young forests with great potential to protect biodiversity and provide ecosystem services, if nurtured properly and if protected. This work has also incorporated a social perspective, as forests and their status are linked to human activities in surrounding landscapes that are driven by economic, political, and cultural factors at different geographic scales. 

Mongabay: What do you see at the next big idea or emerging innovation in tropical forest conservation? And why? 

Robin Chazdon: The next big idea is to integrate the social and natural components of forest conservation, use of forest products, and restoration. In reality, these aspects are completely intertwined, but in practice they are completely separated. I believe (along with many others) that the scale at which we can begin to integrate these components is at the landscape scale. Working at the landscape scale will require new approaches and new institutions, and this is where the innovations are needed. Further, the structures that are effective in one region or landscape may not be universally effective. So we need to work with local and regional teams of partners to make forest conservation and restoration work in ways that improve the livelihoods of local people. The traditional "top-down" approach to conservation involving large international conservation organizations that protect forests by isolating them from local people has not prevented massive deforestation around the world; a new approach involving local people as conservation stewards, reforesters, and prudent forest users is required. This is a huge challenge, but it is where we need to go. 



Crown of a giant rainforest tree in Costa Rica. Photo by Rhett A. Butler. 

Mongabay: Are you currently involved in any projects or research that represent emerging innovation in tropical forest conservation? 

Robin Chazdon: I'm so glad you asked! I am directing a new project that will integrate social and ecological aspects of reforestation in the tropics through interdisciplinary synthesis of existing information. This Research Coordination Network was recently funded by the US National Science Foundation, and we called it PARTNERS (People and Reforestation in the Tropics: A Network for Education, Research, and Synthesis). Our goal is to address the social and ecological factors that lead to forest transitions in different tropical regions, the factors that underlie forest resilience, interactions between climate change and reforestation, and the socio-economic and ecological costs and benefits of different reforestation outcomes (natural regeneration, agroforestry, restoration plantations, commercial plantations). PARTNERS will synthesize existing knowledge, identify knowledge gaps, identify new directions for interdisciplinary research, and prepare peer-reviewed documents for educators and policy makers. For more information about the 5-year project, visit our website http://partners-rcn.uconn.edu


This post was funded under Mongabay.org's Special Reporting Initiatives (SRI) program. To support content like this, please visit mongabay.org and consider making a tax-deductible donation.

Thursday, September 18, 2014


#Wildfires

Why aren't the U.S.A.Congress members listed below passing the bills for availing the funds for the Wildfire Disaster Funding Act of 2014?



Today, September 18. 2014, we learned that the King Fire in California has grown to over 70,000 acres, and the Governor of California has declared a state of emergency. 

"California's fire season, which traditionally runs from May to October, is on track to be the most destructive on record, state fire managers say."

We really need for the members of Congress listed below to go ahead and sign the discharge petition to release the funds needed for the 
The Wildfire Disaster Funding Act of 2014 ~ S.1875 and HR 3992


Written content reposted from Western Priorities:

THE REVEALING POLITICS BEHIND THE ISSUE OF “FIRE-BORROWING” AND WHAT CAN BE DONE ABOUT IT

August 20. 2014
Author: Greg Zimmerman
By Greg Zimmerman and Jessica Goad

Wildfires are a perennial issue in the American West, and the question of how to pay their costs has never been more significant. http://headwaterseconomics.org/wphw/wp-content/uploads/fire-costs-background-report.pdf  But, in a twist that could only occur in today’s political climate, a broad​ bipartisan fix to this issue is currently mired in gridlock.

At issue is the fact that when wildland firefighting costs exceed the funding that is appropriated every year, the U.S. Forest Service and Department of the Interior are forced to dip into other accounts.  
This is called “fire-borrowing,” and it’s not a good policy.  
By “robbing Peter to pay Paul,” as the old adage goes, the federal government is actually draining critical money earmarked to reduce wildfire risks just to keep up with the growing costs of wildfire.

This week, the Western Governors Association even chimed in with a letter http://www.westgov.org/images/wildfire_letter_final.pdf to Congressional leadership “strongly urging” them to “resolve this burgeoning problem for the West without further delay.”

Unlike most public policy issues, and natural resources issues in particular, this one has a potential bipartisan solution.  
The Wildfire Disaster Funding Act of 2014 https://beta.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-bill/3992/text has been introduced in both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. Under this act, the most expensive wildfires each year would be paid from disaster funds, similar to how the federal government funds recovery for other natural disasters like hurricanes and tornadoes.

More than a quarter of the members of the United States House have co-sponsored this bill, including over 50 Republicans.  In fact, a Center for Western Priorities analysis finds that 65% of all Western House members have co-sponsored the bill.

But here’s the rub: in order to quickly move the bill through the House of Representatives, 218 members (an absolute majority) must sign a “discharge petition” http://clerk.house.gov/113/lrc/pd/petitions/DisPet0010.xml for the bill.  Currently, the discharge petition is only a few dozen signatures short of the necessary 218. http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2014/08/04/hung-out-to-dry-simpson-gop-lawmakers-abandon-wildfire-bill

Here are the bill’s cosponsors who have not yet lent their names to the discharge petition:

Arizona: Rep. Matt Salmon (R)​

California: Rep. Ken Calvert (R)​, Rep. David Valadao (R)​, Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R)​, Rep. Paul Cook (R)​, Rep. Devin Nunes (R)​, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R)​, Rep. Darrell Issa (R)​, Rep. Buck McKeon (R)​, Rep. Edward Royce (R)​, Rep. Tom McClintock (R)​, Rep. Jeff Denham (R)​, Rep. Duncan Hunter (R)​

Colorado: Rep. Scott Tipton (R)​, Rep. Cory Gardner (R)​, Rep. Mike Coffman (R)​, Rep. Doug Lamborn (R)​

Idaho: Rep. Michael Simpson (R)​, Rep. Raul Labrador (R)​

Montana: Rep. Steve Daines (R)​

New Mexico: Rep. Stevan Pearce (R)​

Nevada: Rep. Mark Amodei (R)​

Oregon: Rep. Kurt Schrader (D)​, Rep. Greg Walden (R)​

Utah: Rep. Rob Bishop (R)​, Rep. Chris Stewart (R)​, Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R)​, Rep. Jim Matheson​ (D)​

Washington: Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R)​, Rep. Jamie Herrera Beutler (R)​, Rep. David Reichert (R)​

It’s unclear why these politicians have not yet signed the discharge petition.​ An explanation could go a long way toward resolving the future of wildfire suppression funding in the west.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014



#Wildfires


HEALING RETREAT CENTER 
 For Mr. Brendan McDonough and the Wildland Firefighter Foundation






Tuesday, September 9, 2014



#Wildfires

Reposted from ABC 15 ARIZONA

Sole Survivor Using Tragedy to Make a Difference ~ Hopes to Build Healing Center to Help Others

Wildland Firefighter Foundation Healing Retreat Center



LONE SURVIVOR OF GRANITE MOUNTAIN HOTSHOTS SPEAKS ABOUT HOW HE WANTS TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE

Navideh Forghani
10:23 PM, Jun 29, 2014
Updated 10:12 PM, Jun 30, 2014
prescott | yarnell | northern arizona



PRESCOTT, AZ - The Lone Survivor and the Granite Mountain Hotshot number 20 are two of the nicknames that Brendan McDonough received after he survived and 19 of his hotshot brothers perished in the Yarnell Hill wildfire.

McDonough continues to cope and deal with the reality that he lost 19 brothers last June and that he was the only one to survive that fateful day.

It's a tragedy that hit his heart 19 different ways but also taught the 22-year-old to make the most out of every day.

"You never think it's going to be you," he said. "There are mornings where I wake up and the first thing on my mind is that I lost 19 brothers. There are days I don't want to get up."

McDonough never received training on how to deal with losing brothers during a fire and every day for the past year he has worked to overcome the challenges he has faced.

"It's been a journey this past year to get where I am today," he said. "Ever since day one I've strived to be better."

McDonough feels like he's been given a second chance at life so he's focused on his chance to spend more time with his daughter even though this tragedy shattered his world.

"I miss them a lot. I miss my best friends," McDonough said.

McDonough also wants to make a difference with his second chance. He doesn't want to waste anything.

"I have so much to learn and I don't want to put what I've been given to waste."

Copyright 2014 Scripps Media, Inc.


Sunday, September 7, 2014



#Wildfires

Reposted from Wildfire Today:

YARNELL HILL FIRE SURVIVOR PUSHES 
FOR CREATION OF A "HEALING CENTER"


Posted on September 7, 2014 by Bill Gabbert

Biden, Brendan McDonough, Janice Brewer
Brendan McDonough, Yarnell Hill Fire survivor, speaks in Prescott, Arizona at the July 9, 2013 memorial service for the 19 firefighters that died on the fire. Vice President Joe Biden and Arizona Governor Janice Brewer are on the left and right, respectively. Photo by Bill Gabbert.

Brendan McDonough watched from a distance as the other 19 members of the Granite Mountain Hotshots became entrapped and died June 30, 2013 on the Yarnell Hill Fire south of Prescott, Arizona. Now, according to an article in the USA Today, he still struggles with stress-related problems. No longer a firefighter but working for the Wildland Firefighter Foundation, he wants to “create a non-profit organization to fulfill a dream of building a “healing center” in Prescott where first-responders, including troubled wildfire crews and their families, can seek treatment.”

The article’s main focus is a topic that rarely gets discussed in the world of wildland fire — the day to day psychological strains that firefighters face which are similar to those experienced by warfighters. The military has a highly developed program for treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but the land management agencies, with a primary focus of growing trees, cleaning campgrounds, and managing visitors and non-native plants, have done little, effectively, to deal with a shocking suicide rate, for example.

The excellent article gives several examples of how stress is negatively affecting some of our firefighters. Below is an excerpt:

…Wildland Firefighter Foundation Executive Director Vicki Minor — Burk Minor’s mother — estimates that as many as one in four such firefighters struggle with emotional trauma.

She says her organization counted six firefighter suicides during 2013. If accurate, it suggests a rough suicide rate of 17 per 100,000, far higher than the national average and similar to the pace of these deaths in the military.

“Our government, our fire officials, the Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, they’re really good at taking care of the land and they know how to fight fire,” Vicki Minor says. “They don’t know how to take care of their people.”

Federal workers get free visits to a contracted private counselor, but many firefighters complain these providers are not schooled in PTSD treatment, Vicki Minor says. “I’ve had several of these men say that they had to pay for a therapist out of their own pocket,” she says.

The Forest Service recently published pocket-sized pamphlets with tips on traumatic stress and resilience. But the guides offer nothing about where to seek help if necessary, except to cite websites from the Department of Veterans Affairs and private suicide support groups.

Forest Service Fire Management Director Harbour says the deaths of the 19 Prescott firefighters were a wake-up call on the emotional stress firefighters may incur. “How do we deal with what we carry after we go through a traumatic incident?” he asks.

He and his staff have turned to the Marine Corps for ideas about building emotional resilience in firefighters. He urged in a briefing paper to senior officials that “we have developed wonderful new tools to help physically protect firefighters. Now is the time to ‘build a better brain!'”



Yarnell Hill Fire Honor Escort
On July 7, 2013, 19 hearses carried the remains of the Granite Mountain Hotshots back to Prescott, Arizona. Photo by Bill Gabbert.

Thanks and a hat tip go out to Kelly.
This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged firefighter health, Yarnell Fire by Bill Gabbert. Bookmark the permalink.

About Bill Gabbert

Wildland fire has been a major part of Bill Gabbert’s life for several decades. After growing up in the south, he migrated to southern California where he lived for 20 years, working as a wildland firefighter. Later he took his affinity for firefighting to Indiana and eventually the Black Hills of South Dakota where he was the Fire Management Officer for a group of seven national parks. Today he is the creator and owner of WildfireToday.com and Sagacity Wildfire Services and serves as an expert witness in wildland fire. If you are interested in wildland fire, welcome… grab a cup of coffee and put your feet up. 
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Saturday, September 6, 2014




#Wildfires
#WDFA
#S1628

SO, WHEN IS OUR U.S.A. CONGRESS GOING TO GET DOWN TO BUSINESS TO SUPPORT OUR PEOPLE WHO PROTECT OUR COUNTRY AS WILDLAND FIREFIGHTERS?




When we started Vote4Wilderness, the plan was to present news only, not to focus on personal opinion or point of view. I will try to adhere to that, but must admit that the issue of our Congress stalling on passing two bills to assist our wildland firefighters has saddened me deeply, and I can not remain silent. 

The first bill I am referencing is S. 1628 ~ Fallen Wildland Firefighters Fair Compensation Act. This proposed bill addresses the need for benefits to be delivered to the surviving family members of contracted wildland firefighters who gave the ultimate sacrifice on the job.These people, the contracted wildland firefighters do the same job that federally employed wildland firefighters do, yet their families are denied benefits because their loved ones were "contracted" wildland firefighters. Senator Merkley of Oregon initiated a Congressional bill to address this injustice in 2013. You can read all we have collected pertaining this situation here: 
http://stopwaronwilderness.blogspot.com/2014/08/vote4wilderness-wildland-firefighters.html?spref=tw 

The second bill has been working its way through Congress, and was stalled before Congress recessed for 5 weeks. This bill is the Wildfire Disaster Funding Act ~ S.B. 1875 and H.R. 3992. In essence, it defines wildfires as natural disasters, freeing up funds to fight them, instead of relying on "fire borrowing" from the funds that were earmarked to fund preventative forestry practices, (i.e. removing fuel load of pine beetle devastated trees ) so that wildfires would not be so catastrophic. The information about it is here: 
http://stopwaronwilderness.blogspot.com/2014/09/vote4wilderness-wildfires-wdfa-wildfire.html?spref=tw

The Congress members that are holding up the passage of that bill to classify wildfires as natural disasters are here:
http://westernpriorities.org/2014/08/20/the-revealing-politics-behind-the-issue-of-fire-borrowing-and-what-can-be-done-about-it/



#Vote4Wilderness
#Wildfires
#WDFA
#S1628

Reposted from USA Today:

WILDFIRE CREWS BATTLE PTSD, MUCH LIKE SOLDIERS AT WAR





By Gregg Zoroya, USA TODAY 6:01 a.m. EDT September 6, 2014 

Echoes of the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan reverberate on the scorched hillsides of America's Northwest this summer as wildfire crews grapple with psychological strains much like those that ravaged the nation's fighting forces.

But where terrorism and insurgencies drove the intensity of combat for U.S. troops, scientists say climate change is the force lengthening fire seasons and generating fiercer blazes, particularly across America's drought-stricken West.

"Obviously, we don't experience the horror of war. But we do experience, sadly, periodic tragedy," says Tom Harbour, fire and aviation management director for the U.S. Forest Service. "We experience situations where we do feel out of control and overwhelmed. ... It's not six degrees of separation. It's more like one."

He says there's no pulling out and coming home from this war.

An area nearly the size of Delaware has burned in the Northwest this year and the season has weeks left to go. For Oregon and Washington, that's 3 1/2 times the area's 10-year average.

Climate change and the dire consequences it holds for the future of America's forests was a central theme of the Forest Service's quadrennial review published this year.

The drought plaguing the West will continue, the report says. Winter snowpacks will melt earlier, leaving newly spawned vegetation to dry and become fuel for fire. More insects will leave trees dead or dying. Firefighting seasons will keep getting longer.

TRAUMA STILL PRESENT

The wildfire community is still recovering emotionally from the loss last year of 19 hot-shot firefighters from Prescott, Ariz., killed in a box canyon as a fire generating temperatures up to 2,000 degrees roared over them.

"When something like that happens, it's kind of tough to accept," says Neil Gamboa, who supervises a federal hotshot crew from San Bernardino, Calif.

The 19 Prescott firefighters who died were among 34 wild-land firefighting deaths in 2013, the most in 20 years, according to federal officials. Six more have died so far this year.

In addition to the physical dangers of the job, advocates see symptoms that mirror what soldiers display: a reluctance to seek therapy, self-medication by alcohol, even scattered suicides.

After more than a decade of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan where troops served long and multiple deployments, more than a half-million have been diagnosed with mental health issues and thousands have committed suicide.

Those who work with wilderness firefighters worry about similar trends developing within that group.

"There's a heck of a lot of post-traumatic stress going on in the community right now," says Burk Minor, director of the Wildland Firefighter Foundation, located in Boise, Idaho, near the National Interagency Fire Center, the headquarters for battling forest fires.

The foundation supports injured firefighters and families of those who die on duty. As hotshot crews and other wildfire crews cycle through Boise to and from the front lines, many stop in to unwind and vent pent-up emotions, sometimes through tears, Minor says.

"These are big, bad guys. They got lumps in their throat," Minor says. "They see somebody get killed, somebody hit the ground but their parachute didn't open, that's not a pretty sight. And that leaves definite damage on these guys."

There are about 26,000 federal wild-land firefighters and support personnel, including hotshot crews and parachuting smoke-jumpers, and perhaps another 8,000 to 10,000 employed by state or local agencies, says U.S. Forest Services spokesman Mike Ferris.

Federal fire officials say that while their firefighters may be encountering some of the same emotional stress as combat troops, the Forest Service doesn't have the medical support resources of the Army, Navy or Marine Corps.

The Forest Service hired its first full-time staff doctor 18 months ago, and this was in the midst of an agency fire budget that has been shrinking in recent years.

"We do not have a handle on it," Ivan Pupulidy, a Forest Service human performance specialist, says about the extent of emotional trauma among wildfire crews. "It's an area of deep concern for us and one that we mean to explore."

SCARRED FOR LIFE

Jesse Shirley remembers nothing but orange flames around him when he was trapped on the firefighting front lines of northwest Nevada in 2006.

Then a federal hotshot crew member, Shirley was picked up by a fire devil — a kind of tornado of flames — and pinned against a bulldozer. Forty-three percent of his body was burned, mostly the backs of his legs. As he waited for a helicopter flight without the benefit of cooling water to douse his wounds, the burns kept burning, going from second to third degree.

"It's not so much the physical scars," says Shirley, 35, who left the hotshots in 2009 and is today a fire prevention officer living near Lake Tahoe. "Those heal. It's more these emotional scars."

A growing state of isolation and hyper-vigilance led him in the years that followed to contemplate suicide, Shirley says. "My world slowly got smaller and smaller. It got so bad, I gave the guns to my wife (Megan) to get them out of the house."

Shirley was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. He has improved with treatment and now works to help other firefighters deal with their emotional problems.

Wildland Foundation Executive Director Vicki Minor — Burk Minor's mother — estimates that as many as one in four such firefighters struggle with emotional trauma.

She says her organization counted six firefighter suicides during 2013. If accurate, it suggests a rough suicide rate of 17 per 100,000, far higher than the national average and similar to the pace of these deaths in the military.

"Our government, our fire officials, the Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, they're really good at taking care of the land and they know how to fight fire," Vicki Minor says. "They don't know how to take care of their people."

Federal workers get free visits to a contracted private counselor, but many firefighters complain these providers are not schooled in PTSD treatment, Vicki Minor says. "I've had several of these men say that they had to pay for a therapist out of their own pocket," she says.

The Forest Service recently published pocket-sized pamphlets with tips on traumatic stress and resilience. But the guides offer nothing about where to seek help if necessary, except to cite websites from the Department of Veterans Affairs and private suicide support groups.

Forest Service Fire Management Director Harbour says the deaths of the 19 Prescott firefighters were a wake-up call on the emotional stress firefighters may incur. "How do we deal with what we carry after we go through a traumatic incident?" he asks.

He and his staff have turned to the Marine Corps for ideas about building emotional resilience in firefighters. He urged in a briefing paper to senior officials that "we have developed wonderful new tools to help physically protect firefighters. Now is the time to 'build a better brain!'"

Others are moving to provide more direct assistance. Brendan McDonough — the sole survivor of the decimated Prescott hotshot crew, who was on lookout duty when his comrades became trapped by fire — says he struggles with stress-related problems.

McDonough, who now works for the Wildland Firefighter Foundation, is trying to create a non-profit organization to fulfill a dream of building a "healing center" in Prescott where first-responders, including troubled wildfire crews and their families, can seek treatment.

"I've seen what was lacking with what I went through," McDonough says. "The government (officials), they're slow and they have things done the way they want them done and that doesn't always work."

Pupulidy, the Forest Service human performance specialist, says he admires the plan. "They saw a void. And hats off to them for doing it," he says. "Shame on us for not doing it first."




Clark County Engine 10 crewmember hose down grass fire that burned through the fence line and is approaching the house, near Twisp, Wash., on July 17, 2014. (Photo: Kari Greer for the U.S. Forest Service)




Clark County Brush Truck #27 near a barn full of hay that caught fire near Twisp, Wash., on July 17, 2014. Photo : Kari Greer for the U.S. Forest Service




A smoke column on the Cougar Flat Fire is seen as it bears southeast, making a huge run seen from Upper Beaver Creek near Twisp, Wash. Photo : Kari Greer for the U.S. Forest Service



Aero-Flite CL 415 Super Scooper airtanker drops water along the fire's edge near Winthrop, Wash. Photo : Kari Greer for the U.S. Forest Service




Clark Co. Eng 10 Captain Brandon Sciaretta calling a bucket drop from a military Blackhawk next to a home near Twisp, Wash. Photo : Kari Greer for the U.S. Forest Service




Hotshots hike in to their portion of the fireline on the Mack Fire in Idaho. Photo : Kari Greer for the U.S. Forest Service




Boise Hotshot sawyer and swamper team work on the Mack Fire in Idaho. Photo : Kari Greer for the U.S. Forest Service




Boise Hotshot sawyer and swamper team work on the Mack Fire in Idaho. Photo : Kari Greer for the U.S. Forest Service