California's forests are at a turning point. Why aren't we committing to 'good fire'?

“The Karuk people have always lived on the Klamath River, and they used fire to manage resources," Kathy McCovey, a Karuk tribal member and former longtime Forest Service employee, told me.
"If you can’t learn to live with fire and learn how to work with what it is and what it does to help maintain all the things needed for survival in a place like this, then basically you’re working against it, and if enough time goes by, it will work against you," Bill Tripp, director of the Department of Natural Resources for the Karuk, said in a recent interview. "Things in nature have a tendency to win."

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Climate change is only one driver of explosive wildfire seasons — don't forget land management

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Forest Service maxed out as wildfires blaze across US west