The BulleTin • Thursday, June 24, 2021 A13 Burns Continued from A1 In New Mexico, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed legislation on March 18 that will clear the way for more prescribed fires by establishing liability standards for landown- ers who conduct them and cre- ating a certification program. In Oregon, a bill from state Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Ashland, would enact rules for pre- scribed fires and a certified burn manager program. He envisions Oregon having as many as hundreds of trained managers to supervise pre- scribed fires. “I don’t see that we have any option other than to increase the prescribed burns,” said Golden, who is from the Rogue Valley, where wildfires tore into two towns last year. “We’ve got, across the Western U.S., a buildup of decades of fuels, and it’s going to burn. “So do you want to burn in a planned, strategic way that has an element of control to it, or do you want it to burn in megafires, with all the costs — human, animal, environmental costs — that that entails?” It took years for forest man- agers to come around to ac- cept and then finally embrace prescribed burning. In the first half of the 20th century, fire was seen as the enemy, with Camp Continued from A1 One protester was perched on top of a ladder, while oth- ers stood behind the barri- cade. Some shook the barri- cade and taunted officers, who announced that anyone who crossed the barricade would be arrested. The only incident during the sweep came when a shirt- less man with long black hair told an officer he needed to use one of the portable toilets in the camp. After officers denied entry, the man, later identified as 32-year-old Darren Hiatt, jumped over the barricade. He ran into the camp toward the federal and state forest manag- ers believing prescribed burn- ing damaged the environment, particularly timber, a commer- cial resource. But in the late 1960s and 1970s, federal forest managers began employing prescribed burns. Yet scaling up the practice has been slow. From 1995 through 2000, an average of 1.4 million federal acres were treated with prescribed fire each year, far short of the 70 million acres that in 2001 were in critical need of fuel reduc- tion to avoid high-severity wildfires, biologist David Carle said in his 2002 book “Burn- ing Questions: America’s Fight with Nature’s Fire.” Another 141 million acres also needed treatment. Several cold realities are stacked against the latest plans: The periods between wild- fire seasons when prescribed burning can happen safely are shrinking; some forests are too overgrown to ignite without thinning; and prescribed fires can shroud nearby towns. “We have to be mindful of not pouring smoke into com- munities because that’s a viola- tion of the Clean Air Act,” said Tim Holschbach, deputy chief of policy and planning with Or- egon’s Department of Forestry. Furthermore, many land- owners are reluctant to use pre- scribed fire because of fears of getting hit with steep costs. Some states can hold burn- ers liable for any property damage caused by an escaped prescribed fire. Others use so-called simple negligence standards, which require the burner to practice reasonable care. A plaintiff would need to prove negligence for the burner to be responsible for damages and firefighting suppression costs. Gross negligence stan- dards make it harder to hold people accountable, requir- ing plaintiffs to show burners acted with reckless disregard if fires get out of control. To encourage prescribed burning on private lands, Ore- gon will explore shifting from simple to gross negligence. Gov. Kate Brown signed legis- lation on June 11 that directs a state agency, in consultation with stakeholders, to study whether states with such stan- dards experience more pre- scribed fires and more out-of- control fires. The review must also examine the accessibility of insurance coverage for pre- scribed fires. Prescribed burning has prevented disasters, and high rebuilding costs. In 2017, a wildfire threatened Sisters, but firefighters were able to con- trol it because months earlier, crews removed trees and brush with machines, then ignited prescribed burns. “The fire came to a halt, both because it had less fu- els and also because in the toilets, and was quickly tackled and arrested by five officers. “This is what happens when you try to go to the bathroom in Bend, Oregon!” yelled one protester who declined to pro- vide his name. “He’s unarmed. Why are there so many of you?” yelled another protester who declined to provide her name. Protesters, including Rich- ter, crossed the barricade and yelled at officers to release the man. Protesters who crossed the barricade were led by of- ficers back to the other side, and Hiatt was escorted, hand- cuffed, through the camp to a police cruiser. Hiatt was booked in De- schutes County jail on charges of second degree criminal tres- pass, interfering with a peace officer and resisting arrest. According to Richter, Hiatt is a resident of the camp. The bathrooms Hiatt wanted to use were set up by volunteers in an effort to keep the camp clean and to quell sanitation con- cerns from neighbors. During the cleanup, several homeless advocates gathered outside Bend’s first long-term shelter run by Shepherd’s House Ministries, about two blocks south of Emerson Av- enue. The advocates represented Shepherd’s House, Homeless Leadership Coalition, De- schutes County, The Family Kitchen and REACH, a home- less service organization. They showed up to offer support to any homeless person who was displaced by the cleanup. The shelter is closed during the day, but Shepherd’s House brought a van full of snacks and toiletries. “We are here in case any- body does need extra support,” said Colleen Thomas, home- less outreach coordinator for Deschutes County and chair of the Homeless Leadership Co- alition. A few homeless people from Emerson Avenue showed up, but many had already left the area. Thomas and the other advo- cates spent the past few weeks helping the homeless people collect their belongings and find other places to stay. Most had nowhere to go. “Our hope is to continue to know where folks ended up so we can stay in touch with them,” Thomas said, “and make sure they have extra tents and sleeping bags if they need it.” The city has long-term plans to purchase the Bend Value Inn and transform it into a shelter and find a location for a navigation center, where homeless people can go to re- ceive services. Another plan in- cludes finding publicly owned land around the county to cre- ate a managed camp. A Forest Service em- ployee ig- nites a line of fire during a prescribed burn in the moun- tains above Sumpter in 2005. S. John Collins/ Baker City Herald thinned, more natural forest, there was a lot more space for the firefighters,” noted Demo- cratic Sen. Jeff Merkley of Or- egon, who is pushing for more funding for forest treatment. Scott Stephens, a profes- sor of wildland fire science at the University of California, Berkeley, wants a big increase in prescribed burns, along with mechanical forest thinning, but predicts it will be gradual due to both a lack of people trained in it and of political and socie- tal support. The West, which is more susceptible to wildfires because of its vast wildlands and dry climate, has been stepping up prescribed burns. In 2019, 3.7 million acres were treated by prescribed fire in the West, a 268% increase from 2011, the National Asso- ciation of State Foresters and the Coalition of Prescribed Fire Councils said in a report. Stephens said prescribed fire and restoration thinning should increase at least five- fold to turn things around and create healthy forests as Biswell, his predecessor at Berkeley, envisioned. “Once you get areas treated, you have to come back in around 15 years for mainte- nance treatments. And this never ends,” Stephens said. “This is a key point: The pro- gram has to last forever.” None of those plans can help the homeless people evicted from Emerson Avenue, the ad- vocates said. Stacey Witte, the executive director of the homeless non- profit REACH, said the situa- tion shines a light on the gaps in options currently available to homeless people. They can legally camp in the Deschutes National Forest for two weeks or find spaces in the local shel- ters, but otherwise they have to find other places like Emerson Avenue. “We keep moving this prob- lem,” Witte said, “and it’s cost- ing so much more money.” e Reporter: 541-617-7820, kspurr@bendbulletin.com SIZZLING SUMMER SALE Hot Prices Throughout Both Stores! Swivel Glider $699 FREE Foundation or FREE Pillows with mattress purchase FREE DELIVERY & SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE* *Subject to credit approval. See store for details 2071 S. Hwy 97, Redmond 541-548-2066 • www.wilsonsofredmond.net • 63485 N. 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