Page 23 - Flathead Beacon // 8.26.15
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County Enacts Heightened Fire Restrictions Tailored rules allow for farming, combustion engines in effort to support businesses
BY MOLLY PRIDDY OF THE BEACON
With local and state fire resources
already stretched thin, the Flathead County Commission enacted heightened fire restrictions on Aug. 20 in an effort to prevent more blazes from sparking on the valley floor.
Last week, the Northern Rockies Coordination Group announced that Stage II fire restrictions would go into place in Flathead, Lake, Lincoln, and Sanders counties on state, federal, and some county land.
The Aug. 20 restrictions passed unan- imously by the commission were deemed a better fit for Flathead County’s valley floor than the one-size-fits-all approach from the NRCG, with certain activities exempted, such as anything farming related and removing any general restric- tions on combustion engines.
“We’re not trying to hurt any indus- try,” Commissioner Pam Holmquist said. “We’re trying to protect the citizenry – that’s our job.”
The Stage II restrictions for Flathead
County prohibit:
• All campfires
• Smoking, except when in an enclosed
vehicle or building, a developed recre- ation site, or while stopped in at least three feet in diameter that is barren or
cleared of all flammable materials
• Operating motor vehicles off designated
roads or trails
The commission also restricted the
following activities from 1 p.m. to 1 a.m.:
• Logging operations
• Outdoor welding, operating an acet-
ylene torch or other torch with open flame, or any activity creating a fire haz- ard unless in an area at least 10 feet in diameter that is barren or cleared of all flammable materials or has a method of fire suppression on site
• Using an explosive
• A one-hour patrol in the work area is
required once all previously identified activiites are finished
Exemptions to the Stage II
restrictions include:
• Persons using a device fueled solely by liquid petroleum or LPG fuels that can be turned on and off; and barbecues and wood pellet grills. If used, these devices must be in a barren area or cleared of all overhead or surrounding flammable materials within 3 feet.
• Operating generators with an approved spark-arresting device in a barren area or cleared of all overhead or surround- ing flammable materials within 3 feet.
• Operating motorized vehicles on desig- nated roads and trails.
• Emergency repair of public utilities and railroads
• Any federal, state, or local office or member of an organized rescue or fire- fighting force in the performance of an official duty
• All land within a city boundary is exempted
• Other exemptions unique to each agency and tribe
• Any farming-related activities
Stage I fire restrictions, which went into place on July 2, already prohibit
fireworks.
The commission heard from farmers
and other businesses in the valley that may be affected by such restrictions, such as professional lawn maintenance com- panies, and said it tried to address many of the concerns with the tailored Stage II restrictions.
Sheriff Chuck Curry said this is the worst season for fire potential he’s seen in his career in the Flathead, and that any- thing the commission could do to help alleviate the pressure on his resources would help.
Already, fire crews are pulled so thin that of the 110 active fires burning in Northwest Montana, perhaps 50 or 60 are burning unattended because there aren’t enough firefighters.
“We don’t want to impact people’s livelihoods,” Curry said. “But should something happen on the valley floor, I don’t think we could effectively muster
the response (in the time we normally could).”
The commission tried to address the concern of dual jurisdiction, in which the county shares jurisdiction over some of the farmland located within its bor- ders with the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation.
Farms under dual jurisdiction could face hefty fines in the thousands of dol- lars if they operate equipment, because they are under the more stringent Stage II restrictions put in place on state and federal lands.
Commissioner Gary Krueger said the issue “disturbed” him, and that it is an issue the state Legislature will have to fix. Commissioner Phil Mitchell said that any farmer concerned about dual juris- diction could take the commission’s Aug. 20 resolution to DNRC and try to work on a solution.
Mitchell was more vehement in his support of the Stage II restrictions, say- ing that the Flathead Valley is too far behind the curve on getting restrictions passed. Holmquist, in an interview after the meeting, noted that many of the counties in Northwest Montana were still drafting their restrictions when Flathead County passed this resolution.
“We’re not behind in getting these restrictions in place,” she said.
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FIRE SEASON BY THE NUMBERS
7 Million
Acres burned across the West through last week
219,018
Acres burned in Montana and north- ern Idaho, as of Aug. 23
110
Estimated fires of varying sizes burning across Western Montana last week
$830 million
Money spent to combat wildfires in the U.S. this year, as of last week
50%
Percentage of U.S. Forest Service bud- get consumed by fires this year
$4.97 million
Fire suppression funds spent so far this year by the state of Montana. Last year the state spent $1.7 million on fire suppression
29,000
Wildland firefighters battling blazes across the West
AUGUST 26, 2015 // FLATHEADBEACON.COM
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