Arizona Officials See Greater Wildfire Danger

Call for public to be diligent in preventing fires

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey talks about the upcoming wildfire season at the Capitol in Phoenix, Ariz., Tuesday, April 11, 2017. A relatively wet spring means wildfire dangers will be much higher in Arizona’s southern deserts and grasslands as they eventually dry out, leaving the state with mixed anticipation for the upcoming fire season. In the background are members of the Arizona state Department of Corrections’ only female fire crew.(AP Photo/Bob Christie)

 

CLARICE SILBER, Associated Press

PHOENIX (AP) — A wet spring that led to a brisk growing season means a greater risk of wildfire in Arizona’s southern deserts and grasslands as they dry out, leaving the state with mixed anticipation for the upcoming fire season, the state forester said Tuesday.

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Officials say the amount of rain and snow this spring has reduced concerns about potential wildfires in the ponderosa pine and other forests at upper elevations. But officials expect a very busy fire season in the deserts and grasslands of southern Arizona because rains led to an excess of fire fuels in those areas.

Gov. Doug Ducey joined forest and fire officials at the state Capitol to offer their annual outlook on the upcoming wildfire season.

Ducey said wildfires are an inescapable part of Arizona’s ecosystem, and noted the state’s combination of hot, dry weather and overgrown forests creates perfect conditions for the blazes to start. The governor said he’s confident Arizona’s forest managers and fire officials are prepared for the upcoming wildfire season.

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“But sufficient manpower and coordination across local and federal agencies are only part of the puzzle when it comes to preventing fires,” Ducey said. “It remains a stubborn fact that a majority of fires across Arizona are human caused … we must all commit to playing a role in fire prevention by taking it personally.”

State Forester Jeff Whitney said while Arizona is seeing about the same number of fires as 2016, the fires this year are growing larger and faster.

“We’ve already seen some dramatic fire behavior and larger footprint fires in southern Arizona than we typically would expect to see by this time,” Whitney said.

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He said the dry fire season last year left officials very concerned with conditions in the Mogollon Rim and the Colorado Plateau, likening them to the conditions before the Rodeo-Chedeski and the Wallow fires, which were the two biggest wildfires to ravage the state.

Whitney said the state should be thinning around 50,000 forest acres a year but estimated only about 20,000 are being thinned.

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Call for public to be diligent in preventing fires   CLARICE SILBER, Associated Press PHOENIX (AP) — A wet spring that led to a brisk growing season means a greater risk of wildfire in Arizona’s southern deserts and grasslands as they dry out, leaving the state with mixed anticipation for the upcoming fire season, the […]

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