An area in eastern Arizona burned by the Wallow Fire, which officials
say was started by an unattended campfire. (Cronkite News Service Photo
by Brandon Quester)
By IVY MORRIS
Cronkite News Service
Cronkite News Service
PHOENIX – Two years ago, an unattended campfire sparked a wildfire
that burned 15,000 acres near Flagstaff. Last year, another unattended
campfire sent the largest wildfire in state history raging across
eastern Arizona.
With another fire season at hand, Camilla McCauley said she and other
Flagstaff residents would be safer if the U.S. Forest Service simply
banned campfires until monsoon rains arrive.
“We are scared to death that a fire’s going to come up,” she said. “It could devastate this town.”
McCauley and four others have founded Campfires Limited, a grassroots
organization advocating via a website [link:
http://www.campfireslimited.com] and a petition drive for an annual ban
on campfires in the Coconino, Kaibab, Prescott, Tonto and
Apache-Sitgreaves national forests.
The group believes a consistent ban from
May 1 through July 15 would remove any confusion as to whether an
individual national forest has campfire restrictions in place.
Campfires were allowed when the Schultz Fire broke out in the
Coconino National Forest near Flagstaff. Bob Leaverton, director of fire
and aviation for the Forest Service’s Southwestern Region, said that
fire restrictions are determined by a weekly conference call among
state, county, local and other federal fire districts.
“We ask, ‘Looking back what has been the weather trend? What’s the
current weather trend? What’s the potential for extreme fire behavior?
Are we having a lot of campfires left unattended? What is the
availability of firefighting resources?’” he said.
McCauley said weekly updates aren’t effective.
“The Schultz Fire came too soon for their Monday meeting,” she said.
“If they met two days sooner, maybe we could have avoided it.”
Fire officials have said wildfire potential is high in the
southeastern corner of the state and in elevations above 3,500 feet with
dense woodlands. More than a million acres burned around Arizona last
year.
Paige Rockett, public affairs officer for the Tonto National Forest, said Campfires Limited’s proposal is simply not workable.
“We have six national forests and at least four ecosystems. When
there’s snow in one, it’s 90 degrees in another,” she said. “It doesn’t
make sense to impose restrictions on somewhere that doesn’t need them,
we can’t do a one-size-fits-all approach.”
Leaverton, with the Forest Service’s Southwestern District, said he can understand where the group is coming from.
“We are as sensitive to the catastrophic impacts of wildfire as they
are,” he said. “But we have a clear process with the interagency fire
community that takes into consideration the risk of bad fire and the
needs of people to use the national forest.”
Luann Meek, another Campfires Limited founder, said the safest thing
to do is relieve the Forest Service of having to determine when campfire
should and shouldn’t be allowed during wildfire season.
“This campfire issue is just too dangerous,” she said. “Most people really don’t know how to put a campfire out.”
Extinguishing a campfire:
• If possible, allow the wood to burn completely to ash.
• Pour lots of water on the fire, drowning all embers. If you don’t have water, use dirt.
• Pour until hissing sound stops.
• Stir the campfire ashes and embers with a shovel.
• Scrape sticks and logs to remove any embers.
Source: Smokeybear.com
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