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Tuesday, March 19, 2024
March 19, 2024

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Feds OK $10 million to cut wildfire threats

Interior secretary tours N.W. fire site to assess rehabilitation program

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Interior Secretary Sally Jewell walks in the high desert plains of the Blackstock Springs area near the Idaho-Oregon border Tuesday, where the Soda Mountain Fire charred more than 280,000 acres in 2015. Jewell toured the progress of a five-year project to restore the affected areas back to a sagebrush steppe ecosystem.
Interior Secretary Sally Jewell walks in the high desert plains of the Blackstock Springs area near the Idaho-Oregon border Tuesday, where the Soda Mountain Fire charred more than 280,000 acres in 2015. Jewell toured the progress of a five-year project to restore the affected areas back to a sagebrush steppe ecosystem. (Photos by Darin Oswald/Idaho Statesman) Photo Gallery

MARSING, Idaho — Interior Secretary Sally Jewell on Tuesday toured a massive wildfire rehabilitation effort in southwest Idaho that’s part of the federal government’s new wildfire strategy and then announced $10 million for projects in 12 states to reduce wildfire threats.

“It’s easy for folks to think we can’t respond quickly, but we can respond quickly,” Jewell told about 30 federal land managers gathered in the small town of Marsing before heading out to an area where a wildfire last year scorched 436 square miles in Idaho and Oregon.

Jewell issued a secretarial order last year calling for a “science-based” approach to safeguard greater sage grouse while contending with fires that have been especially destructive in the Great Basin. The order also calls for rehabilitating burned areas, and her visit to Idaho gave her a chance to check up on the work.

“One of the things that is very gratifying about what is going on here is that it’s putting the secretarial order into action,” she said, standing on the side of a hill overlooking thousands of acres that have undergone rehabilitation.

The U.S. Bureau of Land Management has partnered with the U.S. Geological Survey to see which rehabilitation efforts work best. Some 2,000 sample monitoring plots are being tracked to measure results of techniques that could become templates for future wildfire rehabilitation efforts.

“They’re looking at doing the research necessary to understand what’s happening on this landscape to apply in the future,” Jewell said. “That’s not something that would have happened before this focus on rangelands and this understating of this sagebrush habitat and its importance.”

Experts say trying to get in desirable plants to prevent non-native invasive species, particularly fire-prone cheatgrass, from coming back is a key part of the rehab plan.

“We have to put in a functioning ecosystem,” Cindy Fritz, a natural resource specialist with the Boise District of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, told Jewell.

Sagebrush steppe supports cattle grazing and some 350 species of wildlife, including sage grouse. The bird didn’t receive federal protections under the Endangered Species Act last fall, but various efforts to protect sage grouse habitat have been put in place.

Those efforts continued Tuesday when Jewell, following her tour of the rehabilitation area, announced in Boise the $10 million worth of projects mostly aimed at preventing sage grouse habitat from burning.

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