BENNET, UDALL PUSH FOR EWP WILDFIRE RECOVERY RESOURCES IN DISASTER RELIEF BILL


BENNET, UDALL PUSH FOR EWP WILDFIRE RECOVERY RESOURCES IN DISASTER RELIEF BILL

12 December 2012

published by www.fireengineering.com


USA — The following information was released by Colorado Senator Michael Bennet:

U.S. Senators Michael Bennet and Mark Udall today introduced a bill to boost resources for the United States Department of Agricultures (USDA) Emergency Watershed Protection (EWP) program to help support the long-term recovery from this summers devastating wildfires in Colorado. Additional EWP resources would be particularly helpful to the communities of Fort Collins and Colorado Springs as they seek to stabilize their watersheds and municipal drinking water infrastructure following the wildfires.

The senators introduced the bill with a goal that it becomes included in the larger disaster relief measure Congress considers for Hurricane Sandy. The White House submitted a request to Congress late last week for $60.4 billion to help recover from the hurricane. The request includes $30 million in EWP funds for watershed and flood prevention operations. However, the scope of the administrations request is currently unclear. The Bennet-Udall measure would address a national backlog for an oversubscribed EWP program, ensuring urgently needed funding for other states that have been struck by presidentially-declared disasters, such as the Colorado wildfires, Hurricane Isaac, and flooding in the upper Midwest.

Eastern states should have the resources they need to recover from the destruction of Hurricane Sandy, Bennet said. This summer, Coloradans also endured devastating disasters catastrophic wildfires in the midst of one of the worst droughts in decades. This bill will ensure adequate resources to help Colorado communities restore the stability of their watersheds and protect their drinking water infrastructure. The measure will also help other states struck by major disasters that have urgent EWP needs.

Colorado experienced one of the most severe wildfire seasons on record this year. Even though the fires have long since been extinguished, communities in Larimer, Weld and El Paso counties are to this day grappling with the long-term threat to their water supplies and the ongoing threat of flash flooding, Udall said . This legislation will help ensure that Colorados wildfires and their lingering effects are not forgotten as Congress takes up how to allocate new disaster-relief funds. Failing to address these damages could ultimately cost Coloradans and all taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars in the future.

Bennet and Udall teamed up with members of the Colorado delegation last week in requesting the president include resources for EWP in any disaster assistance request to Congress. The Colorado senators made the same request of the Senate Appropriations Committee, while the members of the House made a similar request to House appropriators.

EWP supports projects to restore damage to watersheds and drinking water infrastructure such as debris-clogged stream channels, undermined and unstable stream banks, jeopardized water control structures and public infrastructures and damaged upland sites stripped of protective vegetation by fire or drought. In Fort Collins, as a result of the historic High Park fire, the watershed supplying municipal water to the city has a high risk of water quality degradation, flood hazard and road washouts. Similarly, Colorado Springs is struggling with the exposure of a major utility pipe (which is usually buried) in the aftermath of this summers Waldo Canyon fire. With supplemental funding allocated to the EWP, these communities can improve these watersheds, protect critical infrastructure, and prevent future catastrophic damage from fires and floods.

The EWP program is under the jurisdiction of the Senate Agriculture Subcommittee on Conservation, Natural Resources and Forestry, a Subcommittee Bennet chairs. More information on the program can be found here: http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb1045263.pdf .
 The failure was in the forest areas.Advertisement

Following a 10-year strategy, ACT fire managers have created a mosaic across the landscape of different fuel levels, burning at every opportunity.

But forests have been too wet to burn this spring and the past two summers.

Read more:http://www.canberratimes.com.au/environment/red-alert-for-high-risk-of-fires-20121118-29koa.html#ixzz2CmafUgo3
 The failure was in the forest areas.Advertisement

Following a 10-year strategy, ACT fire managers have created a mosaic across the landscape of different fuel levels, burning at every opportunity.

But forests have been too wet to burn this spring and the past two summers.

Read more:http://www.canberratimes.com.au/environment/red-alert-for-high-risk-of-fires-20121118-29koa.html#ixzz2CmafUgo3
 The failure was in the forest areas.Advertisement

Following a 10-year strategy, ACT fire managers have created a mosaic across the landscape of different fuel levels, burning at every opportunity.

But forests have been too wet to burn this spring and the past two summers.

Read more:http://www.canberratimes.com.au/environment/red-alert-for-high-risk-of-fires-20121118-29koa.html#ixzz2CmafUgo3
 Two summers of unprecedented rain and unusually cool temperatures have left a large fuel load of grass and unburnt forest areas in and around Canberra.

A network of 500 fire trails and strategic burns along the north-west urban edge, heavy grazing and extra grass slashing will create a fortress for the territory which forecasters say faces a higher than average risk this summer.

After a fire-fuelled tornado in January 2003 killed four Canberrans and frightened thousands more, CSIRO fire expert Phil Cheney told the subsequent inquiry the fire’s penetration into urban areas under extreme conditions did not reflect a failure of fuel management on the urban interface.

Read more:http://www.canberratimes.com.au/environment/red-alert-for-high-risk-of-fires-20121118-29koa.html#ixzz2CmaXNjum
 The failure was in the forest areas.Advertisement

Following a 10-year strategy, ACT fire managers have created a mosaic across the landscape of different fuel levels, burning at every opportunity.

But forests have been too wet to burn this spring and the past two summers.

Read more:http://www.canberratimes.com.au/environment/red-alert-for-high-risk-of-fires-20121118-29koa.html#ixzz2CmafUgo3
 


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