California Senators Urge US To Transition Departments To Year-Round Firefighting Agencies

LOS ANGELES (CBS13/AP) — California's U.S. senators and nearly two-dozen representatives asked the Agriculture and Interior departments on Monday to transition their agencies to a year-round wildland workforce because blazes are no longer limited to traditional fire seasons.

The move would require reclassifying more seasonal federal firefighter positions as permanent, said a letter to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland.

"As California and the West continue to contend with historic and destructive wildfire seasons, it has become clear that we are entering a 'new normal' in which increasingly intense wildfires wreak havoc during a nearly year-round fire season," it said.

The letter signed by Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla and 21 members of Congress notes that 57% of forest land in California is owned by the U.S. government.

The request came after a disastrous 2020 in which more than 9,900 fires burned 4.25 million acres (1.72 million hectares), killed 33 people and destroyed nearly 10,500 homes and other buildings.

"And this year, we are already well above average for both the number of fires and acres burned," the letter said.

Although it is still early spring, a wildfire erupted during the weekend in Siskiyou County and grew to more than 870 acres. It was 80% contained Monday, Cal Fire said.

Scientists say warmer temperatures and a lack of rain are leaving plants and trees more flammable, creating the conditions for wildfires to grow quickly and burn with more intensity. California's fire season has been starting earlier and ending later. Last year's unprecedented season began with the lightning siege. By the start of November 2020, about 9,000 wildfires scorched a record 4.1 million acres (16,970 square kilometers). More than 10,000 structures were destroyed or damaged, and there have been 31 fire-related fatalities.

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