Montana Fire Season Expected to Outpace Funding

Reserves may run out due to budget shortfall adjustment

 

In this July 6, 2017 file photo, a wildfire burns near the historic mining town of Landusky, south of the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation in north-central Montana. Montana’s worst fire season in years is expected to scorch the drought-stricken landscape well into fall, long after the state’s firefighting reserves run out thanks to politicians diverting millions of dollars to fill a budget shortfall. (Meg Oliphant /The Billings Gazette via AP, File)

 

By MATT VOLZ, Associated Press

HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Montana’s worst fire season in years is expected to scorch the drought-stricken landscape well into fall, long after the state’s firefighting reserves run out thanks to politicians diverting millions of dollars to fill a budget shortfall.

There is only $12 million left of the $63 million in the firefighting fund in June, and the state is burning through that at a rate of $1.5 million a day, state Department of Natural Resources and Conservation director John Tubbs said Tuesday.

See also  Dutch Village Evacuated as Precaution Due to Wildfire Smoke

“We will use up the remaining balance in fairly short order,” he said.

The state’s financial worries come as forecasters for the National Interagency Fire Center predict that eastern Montana, southern California and the western Dakotas could be exposed to major wildfire threats into October or November.

A wet winter and spring produced thick grasses in the region, but a hot June melted the snow and dried out the vegetation, leaving it vulnerable to lightning-caused fires, said Bryan Henry, a meteorologist for the fire center.

The threat of major wildfires also will remain high throughout August in northern Nevada and parts of the Northwest and northern Great Plains, he said.

More fires are now burning in Montana than any other state. So far, they have torched 578 square miles (1,476 square kilometers) — an area larger than Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park — through both mountain timber in the west and grasslands in the east.

See also  Montana Wildfires to Last for Another Month

That’s already surpassed the land burned every year since 2012, when 1,907 square miles (4,939 square kilometers) burned in Montana, costing the state $55 million.

Most of the fires started in July. The state spent $21 million fighting fires that month — equal to the amount it spent for the 12 months before that, Tubbs said.

The eruption of wildfires caught state lawmakers and officials off guard after forecasts in the spring predicted only a moderate fire season. That’s when lawmakers passed a measure mandating that $30 million be transferred out of the fire fund if the state’s income came in lower than revenue forecasts.

The revenue numbers came in last month, triggering the transfer and a slew of budget cuts across state government.

See also  Some 3,000 Firefighters Fight to Contain Colorado Wildfires

Republican Sen. Pat Connell of Hamilton said he is concerned that another major fire could erupt at any time without enough money left in the fire fund.

“We’ve got a long way to go through this fire season and I’m very scared about our future,” Connell said.

If the fund runs dry, state officials will still be able to respond to fires, Tubbs said. His department can pull up to $22 million from the state’s general fund, and an earlier fire disaster declaration by Gov. Steve Bullock authorized an additional $16 million.

But with the revenue shortfall, it’s not clear how much cash is available. Tubbs said that will be a challenge for the governor’s budget director.

Some relief came when the U.S. government last week approved a grant that will allow the state to recover three-quarters of its costs to fight its largest fire burning in eastern Montana. The amount of the savings is not yet clear.

The state is also entering into cost-sharing agreements to fight fires with the U.S. Forest Service, which will also help, Tubbs said.

___

AP writers Dan Elliott in Denver and Bobby Caina Calvan in Helena contributed to this report.

All contents © copyright 2017 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Topics

Subscribe to Our Monthly Newsletter

Stay in the loop with our wildland newsletter.

Reserves may run out due to budget shortfall adjustment     By MATT VOLZ, Associated Press HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Montana’s worst fire season in years is expected to scorch the drought-stricken landscape well into fall, long after the state’s firefighting reserves run out thanks to politicians diverting millions of dollars to fill a budget […]

Get The Wildland Firefighter Newsletter

Related Articles

WA Lawmakers Slash Wildfire Budget in Half

WA Lawmakers Slash Wildfire Budget in Half

Isabella Breda - The Seattle Times May 8—CAMP CAMREC, Chelan COUNTY — The last fire to burn this forest was started by drip torches. Fingers of flame ignited the underbrush last fall, clearing fuels that could supercharge a wildfire. In a tour of the burn area last...

Wildfires Burn Thousands of Acres on Tribal Lands in ND

Wildfires Burn Thousands of Acres on Tribal Lands in ND

By JACK DURA Associated Press BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Crews have been fighting at least 16 wildfires throughout North Dakota in the last several days, including several large fires still burning Tuesday across wooded areas and grasslands on the Turtle Mountain...

NC Fire Grows to 1,300 Acres; Burn Ban Implemented

NC Fire Grows to 1,300 Acres; Burn Ban Implemented

Martha Quillin - The Herald (Rock Hill, S.C.) (TNS) A wildfire in Brunswick County that started Friday, May 2, is the largest of dozens of fires crews are working to contain across North Carolina. Weekend rains helped with some of the fires, but much of the state...