LOCAL & STATE THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 2021 FIRES “It’s safe to say we’re going to have a long, diffi cult season — it’s just a matter of where.” Continued from Page 1A Livingston is the Wallowa- Whitman’s fi re staff offi cer, McCraw the fi re manage- ment offi cer for the Whitman District in the southern half of the forest. When they consider the threats they’ll likely deal with over the next three months or so, Livingston and McCraw worry more about what’s going to happen thousands of feet up in the atmosphere, where electrical storms sometimes brew on hot sum- mer afternoons, than what will transpire below, on the ground. And they have a strong statistical reason to expect trouble from above. On the Wallowa-Whitman over the past half century, lightning — not careless or intentionally destructive people — has sparked almost eight of every 10 blazes. That’s quite a different situ- ation, Livingston said, than what prevails in national forests that are closer to met- ropolitan areas — the Mount Hood, for instance, parts of which are less than an hour’s drive from Portland, or the Willamette, a similar distance from both Salem and Eugene. In those forests the percent- ages are nearly reversed, Livingston said, with human- caused fi res predominant. This difference is refl ected in the national forests’ dis- parate strategies during fi re season, Livingston said. The Mount Hood and the Willamette have fi re staff who spent much of their time patrolling, particularly in popular areas such as camp- grounds, so as to be ready to douse human-caused blazes, he said. On the Wallowa-Whitman, by contrast, those sorts of BAKER CITY HERALD — 5A — Noel Livingston, fi re staff offi cer, Wallowa-Whitman NF we just didn’t get the light- ning,” McCraw said. It was the second consecu- tive tranquil fi re season on the Wallowa-Whitman, even as major blazes were spread- ing across millions of acres elsewhere in the West. Again, the relatively scar- city of lightning storms was a key factor. In 2019 the Wallowa-Whit- man had 67 lightning fi res, which burned 27 acres. The past two summers illustrate what might seem, to a layperson giving the matter cursory consideration, some- thing of a misnomer. It’s not especially rare, Liv- ingston said, that summers with extreme fi re danger actually turn out to be rela- tively quiet fi re seasons on the Wallowa-Whitman. S. John Collins/Baker CIty Herald File “In really dry years we The McClain fi re burned near Oxbow, in eastern Baker often don’t get as much light- County, in 2006. ning,” he said. And to reiterate, lightning “prevention patrols” are what Despite bigger crowds at is the factor that plays by far Livingston describes as a “col- campgrounds and other rec- the greatest role in a fi re sea- lateral duty” for fi refi ghters. reation sites on the Wallowa- son’s severity on the Wallowa- “We don’t typically do that Whitman in 2020 — and the Whitman. except in extreme conditions,” expectation for similar scenes The situation is similar on Livingston said. “We don’t this summer — Livingston other public land in the state’s have to do it in a normal year.” said he was “pleasantly sur- northeast corner, primarily He concedes, though, that prised that we didn’t get more sagebrush steppe for which 2021 isn’t likely to be a nor- human-caused fi res than we the Bureau of Land Manage- mal year. did.” ment is the chief fi refi ghting At least not as that word Indeed, the Wallowa-Whit- agency. was defi ned until 2020. man’s total of 12 human- On private and state land, Livingston said the pan- caused fi res, which burned a where the Oregon Depart- demic-driven trend of more total of just 23 acres, was less ment of Forestry handles people recreating outdoors than half the yearly average much of the fi refi ghting, light- in 2020, a phenomenon seen of 30 human-sparked fi res ning sparks 70% to 75% of across the West, was notewor- from 1970-2019. fi res on average in Northeast- thy on the Wallowa-Whitman. Lightning fi res were also ern Oregon, said Steve Meyer, “Any time we get more rarer than usual, with 60 wildland fi re supervisor at people in the woods, the risk blazes blackening 12 acres. the state agency’s Baker City goes up,” Livingston said. The annual average is 105 offi ce. “We’re going to pay more at- lightning-sparked blazes. “We’ve had summers when tention to that.” “It was a fairly dry year, but we’re setting records for fi re danger but we don’t have much of a fi re season because we don’t get the lightning,” Meyer said. Despite the prevalence of lightning-ignited blazes in this corner of the state, neither Meyer, Livingston nor McCraw is sanguine about the potential for people to sup- ply the spark. Quite the opposite, in fact. Although lightning is famously fi ckle in where it strikes, Livingston said advances in meteorology have made it much more feasible to forecast thunderstorms, with a fair degree of geographical accuracy, at least a few days, and even up to a week, in advance. Those forecasts can’t tell fi re bosses where bolts will strike, and potentially ignite a fi re, of course. But Livingston said light- ning detectors can pinpoint strikes, which at least gives fi re crews — and the moun- taintop fi re lookouts, of which more than a dozen are still staffed each summer in north- east Oregon — a likely set of places, after the storm passes, to search for the telltale ten- drils of smoke. “It helps us get resources out into an area ahead of time, to focus on areas where we’re most likely to have lightning fi res,” Meyer said. Human-caused fi res, by contrast, are inherently more frightening, offi cials said, simply because people can go almost anywhere. And unlike with lightning, there are no sensors to show where a person carelessly tossed a cigarette or left a smoldering campfi re or drove through a patch of desiccated grass, where hot muffl ers and catalytic converters can ignite the tinder. “Human activity is really a wildcard,” Livingston said. “With human-caused fi res you never know,” Meyer said. “It can be anywhere.” The inherent unpredict- ability of human-caused fi res — when they might happen, as well as where — is one reason the Forest Service and Oregon Department of Forestry institute restrictions on campfi res, the use of chain saws and other activities when fi re danger is high or extreme. Livingston said that despite the many factors that determine the severity of a fi re season on a specifi c national forest, he’s pretty confi dent that the 2021 sea- son will be another damaging one. “It’s safe to say we’re going to have a long, diffi cult season — it’s just a matter of where,” he said. Wilderness fi res could return after 2020 hiatus Over the past two decades, fi re managers have allowed more than a dozen lightning- sparked fi res to burn naturally in the Eagle Cap Wilderness, Oregon’s largest wilderness at 365,000 acres. The goal is to allow fi re to perform its natural functions, including reducing the amount of fuel on the ground and po- tentially reducing the severity of future blazes. The Wallowa-Whitman sus- pended this program in 2020 to allow crews, who were trying to avoid spreading COVID-19, to focus on other blazes. Livingston said lightning fi res in the Eagle Cap this summer could potentially be monitored rather than doused as soon as possible. Bentz tours fire Brown signs bill banning guns at Capitol ■ The law, which takes effects this fall, also requires owners to safely store guns dispatch center dren, suicides and mass shootings. It requires that fi rearms be secured SALEM — Legislators have brought with a trigger or cable lock, in a locked guns into the Oregon State Capitol for container or gun room. personal protection. Protesters have Opponents said a delay in accessing a carried semi-automatic rifl es onto the fi rearm for self-defense could cost lives. grounds and into the building. Jim Mischel, of Sheridan, Oregon, Later this year, doing so will be out- provided written testimony to lawmak- lawed under a bill signed Tuesday, June ers describing how his wife woke up 1 by Gov. Kate Brown that was earlier when he was away one night in 1981. passed by the Legislature, with Demo- She heard a noise, went to investigate crats in favor and minority Republicans and saw a stranger in their home. opposed. The new law also mandates She tried to get a pistol that was in the safe storage of guns. a locked gun box in the nightstand out “Today, I am signing SB 554 with but was unable to before the man got the hope that we can take another step into the bedroom and threatened her forward to help spare more Oregon with his gun, Mischel said. families from the grief of losing a loved “She has never recovered,” he said. one to gun violence,” Brown said on The bill also bans guns from the Twitter. Oregon Capitol, changing a law that The bill was named for Cindy Yuille allowed concealed handgun licensees to and Steve Forsyth, who were slain in bring fi rearms into the building. a shooting at a Portland-area shop- In a related development, an inter- ping mall in 2012 by a man who stole a faith movement plans to present signa- friend’s AR-15 rifl e. A third person was tures Wednesday to the staff of Oregon seriously wounded. Secretary of State Shemia Fagan, a step Among those who testifi ed in favor of in an attempt to get two initiative peti- the measure was Paul Kemp, Forsyth’s tions onto the ballot. brother-in-law. IP 18 would ban the sale of assault- “I will never forget the screams I style weapons in Oregon. IP 17 would heard when we had to tell my teenage ban the sale of large-capacity magazines nephew that his father had been killed and require a permit to purchase any at the mall,” Kemp said. gun and a completed background check Backers of the new law, which takes before a fi rearm is purchased. effect three months after the Legisla- The movement has gathered the ture adjourns this summer, said it will signatures of 2,000 voters for each prevent accidental shootings by chil- initiative petition and will hand deliver By Andrew Selsky Associated Press By Michael Kohn The (Bend) Bulletin REDMOND — At the edge of the Redmond Airport on Tuesday, June 1, a group of around 10 smokejump- ers went through a brief preparation exercise on the tarmac, then promptly boarded a propeller plane in preparation to leap out of it. The Redmond Smokejumpers are get- ting in their practice fl ights while they can — further into the summer they are almost certain to be busy fi ghting live fi res. With dry conditions across the region and temperatures heating up, this Bentz wildfi re season could be one for the ages. The smokejumpers, and other wildfi re offi cials across multiple agencies, were on hand at the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center to give U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario, a taste of the upcom- ing fi re season. Bentz toured the smokejumper facility, a warehouse of supplies and the Air Tanker Field as the mercury climbed in the mid-90s. “My experience in watching so many fi res over the years is that our agencies are doing their best, and I just want to make sure that, if they need something, they can tell me and we can go back and try to help out,” said Bentz. Bentz said fuel buildup on the forest fl oor is “huge and horrendous” and he supports initiatives to clear brush and conduct more prescribed burns. But Tues- day he was in Redmond to learn more about what offi cials need to fi ght wildfi re when it appears in the Cascades and the High Desert. The tour included a visit to the Northwest Incident Support Cache, a 40,000-square-foot warehouse that stores equipment needed for the fi re season. Kristo- pher Strong, assistant manager for the cache, said a challenge this year has been staffi ng the facility. He currently has 20 workers compared to a typical year of 40 to 60 employees. Part of that is realigning staff assignments and part is the diffi culty in getting new workers to come through the door. “I have advertised these positions more than any other year we have ever done, but it seems like no one is coming in to hand in applications,” said Strong. Strong told Bentz another challenge is the size of the facility. He needs a 130,000-square-foot facility to improve effi ciency and cut costs. Bentz said with Washington, D.C., being more aware of fi res in the West, now is the time for fi re offi cials to push for more money to improve facilities. “We have two U.S. senators who are in a position to help,” Bentz told Strong. “With summer coming and possibly one of the worst fi re seasons, you would be in a good position to ask again.” In another area of the facility, Bentz was briefed by fi re offi cials on what to expect from this fi re season. “For our seasonal outlook we are in a pretty critical drought,” said Kevin Stock, a fi re management offi cer for the Deschutes National Forest. them to Fagan’s staff, said Pastor Mark Knutson of the Augustana Lutheran Church in Portland. “We hope to get the go ahead by early fall, which will give us almost 10 months to get 140,000 signatures to ... place them both on the November 2022 general election ballot,” Knutson said. The debate over guns is being resur- rected as the number of mass shootings climbs again in America, with increased efforts to ban assault rifl es and large- capacity magazines. In Colorado, a gun storage bill was signed into law on April by Gov. Jared Polis, who said: “It’s a sensible measure to help avoid immeasurable heart- break.” Colorado’s law creates the offense of unlawful storage of a fi rearm if a person stores a gun knowing that a juvenile could access it without permission or if a resident of the premises is ineligible to possess a fi rearm. Similar bills this session have failed in Illinois, Kentucky, Montana, New Mexico and Virginia, said Allison Ander- man, senior counsel at the Giffords gun safety advocacy group. States that have passed laws requir- ing some level of fi rearms safe storage in past years include California, Con- necticut and New York, Anderman said. Massachusetts is the only state that requires that all unattended fi rearms be stored with locking devices in place, according to Giffords. EASTERN OREGON 2021 PHOTO CONTEST Official Rules: Photo Contest open now and closes at 11:59 pm Sunday, June 20, 2021. Staff will choose the top 10. The public can vote online for People’s Choice from 12:01 am Monday, June 21 through 11:59 pm Thursday, June 30. Digital or scanned photos only, uploaded to the online platform. No physical copies. Only photographers from Oregon may participate. The contest subject matter is wide open but we’re looking for images that capture life in Eastern Oregon. Submit all photos online at: Entrants may crop, tone, adjust saturation and make minor enhancements, but may not add or remove objects within the frame, or doctor images such that the final product doesn’t represent what’s actually before the camera. The winners will appear in the July 8th edition of Go Magazine; the top 25 will appear online. Gift cards to a restaurant of your choice will be awarded for first, second and third place. bakercictyherald.com/photocontest