Oregon could be in store for a difficult wildfire season because of a multi-year drought and a national labor shortage squeezing available fire personnel.
Gov. Kate Brown and state leaders voiced concerns at a press conference Monday.
鈥淲e鈥檙e fighting fires of a new age, made more intense by impacts of climate change,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淚t is a different wildfire environment with new challenges that stretch our firefighters and resources.鈥
The biggest challenge facing Oregon this year, leaders say, is drought.
Brown has already declared drought emergencies in 15 Oregon counties this year, the most of her tenure for this time of year. About , according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
Late-season rain and snow have helped stave off the start of wildfire season in some parts of the state, but it may have also contributed to the growth of 鈥渇ine fuels鈥 like invasive grasses that could drive large fires, especially east of the Cascades.
to start the season, but will likely spread to Eastern and Southern Oregon as spring precipitation tapers off.
鈥淭hat transition period from non-fire season into fire season will likely come very quickly this year,鈥 said Mike Shaw, fire chief for the Oregon Department of Forestry. 鈥淎nd the fires that we do encounter will be difficult to suppress.鈥
Adding to the challenge this year is a labor shortage that鈥檚 affecting firefighting capacity nationwide.
Federal agencies and private contractors in recent years, a downturn that was exacerbated by the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
鈥淚鈥檝e never seen recruitment drop this low before,鈥 said Scott Polhamus, public information officer for the Organization of Fire Contractors and Affiliates. The Eugene-based organization trains firefighters and certifies trainers.
鈥淚t means less firefighters, simply put,鈥 Polhamus said. 鈥淚t means less crews are going to be available on the hill.鈥
Wildland firefighting is a competitive industry in which government agencies and private contractors compete for workers.
A group of 28 federal lawmakers, in a letter to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, called the labor shortage an 鈥渦rgent threat to natural resources, public safety and taxpayer dollars.鈥
Shaw with ODF said Oregon is 鈥渋n better shape鈥 than federal and private firefighting outfits, but 鈥漷he struggles that those folks have will have an impact on us,鈥 especially later in summer when there鈥檚 more competition for firefighting resources.
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