All California National Forests to Close Today as Fires Continue to Swallow Hundreds of Thousands of Acres

The #AugustComplexNorthZone has forced some of our crews to pull back, account for everyone, and then safely re-engage. We got photos from Information Officer McMillan, who was in Ruth Valley yesterday. These photos share a look at what the day looked like for the firefighters. [Photo from Shasta Trinity National Forest]

The August Complex burning on National Forest lands in September of last year. [Photo from Shasta Trinity National Forest]

Press release from the National Forest Service:

To better provide public and firefighter safety due to the ongoing California wildfire crisis, USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region is announcing a temporary closure of all National Forests in California. This closure will be in effect from Aug. 31, 2021 at 11:59 p.m. through September 17, 2021 at 11:59 p.m. This order does not affect the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest, which is not in the Pacific Southwest Region.

“We do not take this decision lightly but this is the best choice for public safety,” said Regional Forester Jennifer Eberlien. “It is especially hard with the approaching Labor Day weekend, when so many people enjoy our national forests.”

Factors that led to this decision include:

  1. By temporarily reducing the numbers of people on national forests, we hope to minimize the likelihood that visitors could become entrapped on National Forest System lands during emergency circumstances.
  2. The closure order will also decrease the potential for new fire starts at a time of extremely limited firefighting resources, and enhance firefighter and community safety by limiting exposure that occurs in public evacuation situations, especially as COVID-19 continues to impact human health and strain hospital resources.
  3. Due to state-wide conditions, any new fire starts have the potential for large and rapid fire growth with a high risk to life and property. The Forest Service and our partners are absolutely doing all we can to fight these fires and will continue to do so, but the conditions dictate the need for this region-wide closure order.
  4. Forecasts show that conditions this season are trending the same or worse as we move into late summer and fall.
  5. Although the potential for large fires and risk to life and property is not new, what is different is that we are facing: (a) record level fuel and fire conditions; (b) fire behavior that is beyond the norm of our experience and models such as large, quick

    runs in the night; (c) significantly limited initial attack resources, suppression resources, and Incident Command Teams to combat new fire starts and new large fires; and (d) no predicted weather relief for an extended period of time into the late fall.

The following persons are exempt from this Order:

      1. Persons with Forest Service Permit No. FS-7700-48 (Permit for Use of Roads, Trails, or Areas Restricted by Regulation or Order), specifically exempting them from this Order.
      1. Any Federal, State, or local officer, or member of an organized rescue or fire fighting force in the performance of an official duty.
      1. Persons with a Forest Service special use authorization for an electric transmission line, an oil or gas pipeline, communications site, or any other non-recreation special use.
      1. Commercial recreational special-use permit holders and their customers are not exempt from this Order. However, commercial recreational special-use permit holders, under the terms and conditions of their permit, may access their permit areas to conduct administrative functions and to protect property and related assets. Recreation residence permit holders are not exempt from this Order.
      1. Persons with a Forest Service non-special-use written authorization to conduct non- recreational activities, such as harvesting timber or forest products, or grazing livestock.
      1. Owners or lessees of land, and residents of such private landholdings, to the extent necessary to access their land.
      1. Persons engaged in a business, trade, or occupation are not exempt from the prohibitions listed above, but may use National Forest System roads to the extent necessary to carry out their business, trade, or occupation.

More than 6,800 wildfires have burned 1.7 million acres across all jurisdictions in California, and the National Wildfire Preparedness Level (PL) has been at PL5 since July 14, 2021, only the third time in the past 20 years that the nation has reached PL 5 by mid-July – indicating the highest level of wildland fire activity.

The Forest Service thanks our partners and the public for their cooperation and understanding of this extreme public safety and fire threat. Citizens with specific questions within their area should consult their local forest website or social media pages for more information.

 

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4 Comments
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Guest
Guest
Guest
2 years ago

All of South Lake Tahoe is now under mandatory evacuation fire is surrounding the ski resorts. This is the effects of climate change. Afraid to see what next summer brings!

cmon man get real
Guest
cmon man get real
2 years ago
Reply to  Guest

Nope, its the effects of non management of forests. Climate change is a red herring used by those who wish to control others for nefarious reasons and prevent any form of forest management which results in no cutting of any trees or brush. Management equals logging, prescribed burning regularly, opening and maintaining forest logging roads, clearing brush, creating shaded fuel breaks, and removing dead/diseased/and dying trees from the forest. None of these management techniques have been occurring in our National Forests on a landscape level scale in recent times. Therefore, due to poor forest management coupled with the public outcry to stop all logging and forest management on our national forests over the last three decades, has resulted in the complete loss of entire forests on the landscape level. You can thank EPIC and others, not natural and cyclic climate change, for causing the government forest managers stymied by lawsuits to fail in their duty to manage, maintain, and protect our forests.

NRG
Guest
NRG
2 years ago

Will this closure affect the SRNF’s ability to provide the 2021 Whitehouse Christmas Tree?

https://www.uscapitolchristmastree.com

Guest
Guest
Guest
2 years ago

What about the extreme heat??? Are you really saying this has nothing to do with Climate change? The UN just came out with a report that confirmed it’s human caused.. though most people already Know that! I agree forest management is a good idea.. though I don’t think extreme logging is the answer. Removing dead and diseased trees is necessary.