The advocates, including Northern California鈥檚 Karuk Tribe and the Mid-Klamath Watershed Council, want to see more prescribed fires. By burning under controlled conditions, prescribed fires clear underbrush and small timber that can fuel larger, out-of-control fires.
Don Hankins, a professor with Chico State University, is helping develop proposed policy changes. He says he sees support for prescribed burns gaining traction.
鈥淚 think there is recognition that there is a very specific type of fire that the landscape evolved with and we need to get back to that so that we can avoid the types of impacts of the devastating fires we鈥檙e seeing today," says Hankins. "So that gives me hope.鈥
Prescribed fire is also a key part of traditional tribal forest management, and is a centuries-old cultural practice.
Hankins says that many farmers and ranchers trying to manage vegetation are showing support for prescribed burning, as well.
鈥淚 think the broader the base is, you know, spanning the social, cultural side of things, and political spectrum as well, there鈥檚 this commonality that something鈥檚 got to change," says Hankins. "And that鈥檚 really where the strength is coming from in what we鈥檙e developing here.鈥
The Karuk tribe is working with California officials, including Governor Gavin Newsom, to fund tribal burn programs and streamline often-complex regulations to make prescribed burns easier.