ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — If lightning strikes in the New Mexico wilderness and starts a fire, the blaze normally would be little more than a blip on the radar of land managers who have earned a reputation for letting flames burn to keep forested lands from growing into a tangled mess.
This season is different.
Now firefighters are trekking deep into the Gila National Forest with trains of equipment-carrying horses and one overriding goal: snuffing out all fires, no matter how small or remote.
The U.S. Forest Service’s decision is temporary. But after years of upholding fire’s natural ability to clean up the landscape, the agency’s about-face has drawn criticism from watchdog groups, some scientists and others who fear the agency might be setting the stage for an even more destructive season next year.
“At a time of both drought in the interior West and overall increases in average global temperatures, we will be seeing more fire on the landscape and not less. Yet this policy attempts to put our hands over our eyes and deny that reality,” said Andy Stahl, executive director of Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics.
“Rather than making our landscapes more fire resilient, we’re going to return to the mid-20th century approach and earlier of trying to stamp out every fire, which we can’t do.”
The new directive also carries another complication: the risk to firefighters and air crews battling blazes that otherwise would have been allowed to burn, Mr. Stahl said.
Forest Service officials acknowledge that decades of fire suppression have combined with drought, a changing climate and invasive insects to turn much of the West into a tinder box. The decision was purely financial.
“We don’t want to do this long-term,” Forest Service Deputy Chief Jim Hubbard said. “We know being able to use fire makes good sense, and we know some forests are very good at it. And in their ecosystems, it’s the thing they should be doing.”
However, the agency can’t afford to let fires smolder week after week, constantly consuming resources as firefighting crews monitor the flames. Putting out fires quickly costs less, Chief Hubbard said.
Fire suppression now accounts for more than half of the Forest Service’s budget. This year, the agency had $948 million to get the job done, but projections show costs will actually come closer to $1.4 billion by season’s end.
Critics claim it costs more to use slurry bombers and water-dropping helicopters to attack flames far from communities than to let fires burn in places such as Gila National Forest or Montana’s Bob Marshall Wilderness.
Since the 1970s, managers of Gila have been letting fires burn when conditions allow. Researchers say that practice helped minimize the severity of a blaze that blackened more than 450 square miles of the forest earlier this summer. Although it was the largest fire in New Mexico’s recorded history, experts believe most of the burned areas have a good chance at recovery.
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