Even as fire managers emphasize the need for more prescribed burning to reduce fuel loads between fire seasons, climate change is making it harder for them to find safe windows for the burns. The New York Times looks at the challenges land managers face in places like Boulder County, Colorado, where an exceptionally dry and windy spring has prevented the mountain parks department from carrying out any major planned burns.
In California, winter rains have become shorter but more intense, giving grass and brush more time to grow then dry out before the fall.
“I don’t think people realize that we’re actually at a point where, some of these fires, we cannot put them out,” Lenya N. Quinn-Davidson, director of the Northern California Prescribed Fire Council, told the Times. “We really need to be thinking in different ways about how we do things.”
Quinn-Davidson is part of a program training a new generation of prescribed fire leaders. But she stressed that because so many fires take place on national public land, only large-scale prescribed fire projects—and similarly large policy changes—will be able to address the problem.
Two corner crossing cases down, one to go
A prosecutor in Wyoming has asked a judge to dismiss a second criminal case against four hunters who were found not guilty of trespassing by crossing from public land to public land at a corner of the Western land "checkerboard." The prosecutor said that since the facts of the second case, which dated back to 2020, were essentially the same as the case that resulted in acquittal, "a dismissal would be in the interest of judicial economy," according to WyoFile.
That leaves a civil trespassing case which was brought by the billionaire private landowner, but was transferred to federal court at the request of the hunters. The hunters argue that Wyoming law violates the federal Unlawful Inclosures Act, which broadly prohibits landowners from blocking access to public property.
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