December 22, 2017 CapitalPress.com 7 Wildfire Coping with fire loss, looking for solutions Rancher wants DNR to protect rangelands “Firefighters don’t under- stand who owns what and that fields or what looks like an old fence to us maybe very valuable to the rancher,” he said. “We need to get with the rancher, find out where the roads and water are and do some point protection and be more aggressive.” By DAN WHEAT Capital Press PALISADES, Wash. — Like many ranchers around the West, Molly Linville is trying to recover from a hor- rific fire season, but she’s also is trying to change how fire- fighters view rangeland and a state wildfire policy that al- lows them to let it burn. “Firefighters look out here and they don’t see any- thing. It’s wasteland in their minds. I thought they didn’t care. I said I lost everything and I got blank looks. What I’ve learned is they literally don’t understand the value of rangeland,” says Linville, 42, who operates the 6,000-acre KV Ranch, mostly by her- self while her husband works overseas. Most of the state’s 4.5 mil- lion acres of rangeland “is breakfast, lunch and dinner” for cattle, sheep and all sorts of wildlife, she said. The ranch, which next year will have been in her hus- band’s family 100 years, and the nearby hamlet of Palisades are up an out-of-the-way val- ley, known as the Moses Cou- lee, about 25 miles southeast of Wenatchee in central Wash- ington state. Linville saw one of sever- al lightning strikes on a hill- top about a mile west of her house on June 26 that ignited the 37,891-acre Sutherland Canyon and Straight Hollow wildfires. She called firefight- ers, who saved her house and other structures. With her border collie and using her ATV, she was able to save her 60 mother cows, plus calves and four bulls with no time to spare. Coping with losses But most of the grazing land — 5,500 acres — the Linvilles own burned along with 14 miles of fencing. Af- ter consulting soil scientists and other ranchers who have gone through fires, they de- cided it’s best not to graze the land for two years. They had been planning to expand their herd by retaining heifers this fall, but instead they sold the heifers and half of their mother cows for lack of grazing. It will set their program back five years. “The thing we lost the most by selling these cows is all the selective breeding I’ve been working on for years,” Lin- ville said. “I have these cows where they are willing to find their way up through the ba- salt cliffs and graze on top. They get fat on bunch grasses. Their feed conversion on this dry rangeland is excellent.” She said area ranchers be- lieve that firefighters squab- bling over fire district bound- aries and not being proactive caused them to miss several opportunities to stop the fire before it significantly spread. “It clearly didn’t go well,” she said. “I wanted to figure out what went wrong and why and how to fix it.” Not required to fight She met with area fire chiefs and discovered a lack of appreciation of the value of rangeland. Another problem is that two-thirds of the ranch and a large portion of the Mo- ses Coulee aren’t in any fire district. But the biggest problem was a state Department of Natural Resources policy that does not require DNR to fight fires on more than 600,000 acres of DNR-owned non-timbered rangeland in Eastern Washington. Fighting fire on those lands is a low priority. “That was shocking — that our state Department of Nat- ural Resources doesn’t need to protect natural resources. We spend millions of dollars breeding (endangered Co- lumbia Basin) pygmy rabbits in a zoo to release into Grant County and an agency like DNR can just let habitat burn. If a rancher did that, at bare No man’s land Dan Wheat/Capital Press Molly Linville feeds her cows at the KV Ranch near Palisades, Wash., on Nov. 29. She’s reduced the herd after losing 91 percent of her grazing ground for the next two years due to last summer’s Sutherland Canyon Fire. Dan Wheat/Capital Press Molly Linville and her border collie, Stinker, on June 29 near the spot where they herded 60 mother cows and their calves two miles to safety as a wildfire swept through the area. minimum he would be fined,” Linville said. “This is not an indictment against DNR firefighters. It’s DNR policy. It makes DNR a terrible neighbor because they just watch it burn onto your place,” she said. Linville, who has a bach- elor’s degree in wildlife biol- ogy, said she intends to seek legislation requiring DNR to fight fire on all of its range- lands. Loren Torgerson, DNR policy adviser on wildfire, said it’s true most DNR trust lands in the Columbia Basin don’t receive fire protection because they are not forest land and not “assessed” for protection. To change that would take legislation to as- sess them, he said. Some of those lands may also pay a fire district for protection, he said. When a fire occurs on those lands, DNR decides whether to fight it depending on circumstances and whether it would take resources away from lands DNR assesses for protection, Torgerson said. DNR’s statutory responsi- bility is to protect forest lands. Wildlife habitat protection is “a byproduct,” he said. The DNR Forest Fire Pro- tection Assessment is collect- ed with property taxes at a minimum rate of $17.70 per acre on private and state for- est lands, generating about $10 million annually. It is part of approximately $27 million for fire suppression in DNR’s annual budget. The balance comes from other state and federal funds. DNR is also consider- ing reducing wildfire fuels through a new initiative and is aware of wildfire impacts on non-forested land and their value to landowners, Torger- son said. “We don’t take that light- ly but sometimes we have to burn out areas that we can’t safely bring under control. Those are tough decisions,” he said. He said he has no first- hand knowledge of decisions made in fighting the Suther- land Canyon Fire and that it’s hard to second-guess fire commanders’ decisions after the fact. They have to consid- er safety and firefighters’ level of training, he said. Leavenworth, Linville is em- barking on a series of meet- ings and setting up curriculum to educate firefighters on the importance of rangeland to livestock and wildlife. She has spoken to regional fire chiefs and the Washington State Fire Defense Commit- tee, which includes the state fire marshal, emergency of- ficials and representatives of the nine fire defense regions in the state. She emphasizes cattle, wildlife and the tie to the state’s economy. Cattle and calves produce revenues of $700 million to $850 million annually, making them the third- or four-highest value agricultural commodity in the state, according to the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service. A 2014 Washington State University Extension analysis concluded the beef industry contributes $5.7 billion to the state economy each year. “About 1 million head of cattle are slaughtered in the state every year, and people don’t understand those cows are not born in feedlots. Most begin their lives on rangeland or timber grazing allotments,” Linville said. O’Brien said several things came to light when he met with Linville after the Suther- land Canyon Fire. “I felt us as fire services didn’t have an understanding of ranch land, whether range- land or not, and costs associ- ated with it,” he said. Linville’s presentations have been “well received” by fire chiefs and “we are work- ing to put them into lesson plan form,” O’Brien said. Where local ranchers say firefighters dropped the ball in the Sutherland Canyon Fire was when the fire descend- ed Frank’s Canyon on DNR land, crossed onto KV Ranch land and then crossed Pali- sades Road and spread onto thousands of acres in Grant County. It’s also where Douglas County Fire District No. 2 ends and the rest of the valley, including two-thirds of KV Ranch, are in no fire district. It’s a no man’s land that may have been a factor in firefight- ing delays, Linville said. There are numerous other no man’s lands in Washing- ton, Oregon and Idaho. Areas are too remote and vast and their tax base too small for local fire districts to want to annex them. Valley residents are con- sidering forming a fire associ- ation under the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. The big thing, Linville said, is it would allow the fed- eral government to surplus fire equipment to the association. It also would place ranchers under BLM fire command or whatever fire command BLM appoints. Linville sees value in her efforts. Even on rangeland where there are no cows, she says, fires need to be nipped quick- ly because grass and sage- brush are fuels that can give a fire momentum in a hurry. While the Linvilles’ loss is significant, it would be far worse and perhaps force them out of business if it were not for the fact that they have no debt. Firefighter education With the help of Kel- ly O’Brien, chief of Chelan County Fire District No. 3 in 51-2/102