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Maui firefighters took lunch as Lahaina blaze seemed dead. Then it grew.

Timothy Ingalsbee, a fire ecologist who is executive director of the education and advocacy group Firefighters United for Safety, Ethics and Ecology, said Maui firefighters appeared to have followed standard operating procedures.

“It’s not unreasonable that they would disengage from that fire that they thought was fully contained and controlled,” he said. “When you’ve got running flames elsewhere on the island and you’ve got a crew that’s been working hard and needs to get a bit of rest before facing more obvious fire risks, it’s understandable.”

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Learn to live with wildfire smoke, British Columbians told

British Columbians are going to have to live with the health effects of huge forest fires for decades to come and need to be prepared to protect themselves individually and as communities.

“We are going to have to face this again and again and again,” Health Minister Adrian Dix said.

He said it means training and hiring more nurses and providing greater support to health workers as they work with affected people in communities.

And, he stressed, among those most affected by fires and the resulting evacuation alerts and orders are the elderly living in care homes.

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A Northern California tribe works to protect traditions in a warming world

"One of the first things the government outlawed was cultural burning," said the Southern Sierra Miwuk's Lerma.

State officials made this tribal practice of igniting small fires illegal in 1850. The years of fire suppression that followed have made wildfires worse.

"'Smokey the Bear' all over the place," said Fouch-Moore. "And now our forests are overgrown and in bad health. And they're like, 'Oh wait, maybe we should let the Indians do their thing.'"

In recent years, the National Park Service and the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) have started to collaborate with Indigenous communities to return traditional burning to the land.

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Fire as medicine: Using fire to manage forests, prevent catastrophic wildfires in the Northwest

Indigenous communities in the region, including Reed’s, hope in turn that the tribal approach of setting beneficial fires will become a major facet of the Northwest Forest Plan’s update – and a way for people to reconnect with the land they inhabit.“We as humans have a responsibility to the landscape,” Reed said. “We’ve had a disconnect with the reciprocal relationship with the landscape and now we’re starting to feel the consequences.”

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Lane Community College's Fire Management program heading into its second year

Fires are becoming more prevalent now more than ever before, and fire crews are doing their best to keep them under control. But at Lane Community College, fire educators said a new approach is needed. Timothy Ingalsbee is one of the instructors of fire courses at LCC. He believes fires are inevitable no matter how much care is taken to prevent them. That's why their program focuses more on wildfire behavior and learning how to map out fires instead of fire suppression.

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Where there’s smoke: Lane Community College enters its second year of the wildland fire management program

The fire management program started last year and is being taught by Mike Beasley, a fire behavior analyst; Steve Clarke, past president of the Oregon Fire Contractors Association; and Timothy Ingalsbee, who is a former wildland firefighter and a certified senior wildland fire ecologist, as well as the executive director of Firefighters United for Safety, Ethics and Ecology (FUSEE).

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America’s fire spotters aren’t ready to fade away just yet

Wildfires unfold across vast, difficult terrain, in fast-changing conditions and with a frightening amount of random chance. In places like Glacier, officials don’t just put them all out. They must decide, sometimes hour by hour, whether letting a fire burn might provide ecological benefits or whether it is threatening enough lives and property to justify putting firefighters at risk.
New technology aids in these decisions, said Andy Huntsberger, a district fire management officer in the Flathead. But “it doesn’t replace the human element,” he said.

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Living with wildfire: How to protect more homes as fire risk rises in a warming climate

Humans have learned to fear wildfire. It can destroy communities, torch pristine forests and choke even faraway cities with toxic smoke.

Wildfire is scary for good reason, and over a century of fire suppression efforts has conditioned people to expect wildland firefighters to snuff it out. But as journalist Nick Mott and I explore our new book, “This Is Wildfire: How to Protect Your Home, Yourself, and Your Community in the Age of Heat,” and in our podcast “Fireline,” this expectation and the approach to wildfire will have to change.

Over time, extensive fire suppression has set the stage for the increasingly destructive wildfires we see today.

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How Indigenous techniques saved a community from wildfire

“When you think about how wildfire seasons are playing out, if we invested more into the proactive, then we would need less of that reactive wildfire response,” said Kira Hoffman, a wildfire researcher at the University of British Columbia. “We’re not going to see probably the effects of a lot of this mitigation and treatment for 10 or 20 years. But that’s when we’re really going to need it.”
Wildfires are an essential component of the natural cycle of forests, but in recent years, more of them have grown so big that containment is nearly impossible. Fire prevention zones — created in the offseason — can help slow approaching blazes so that people can escape, and can also enable firefighters to gain control over some areas.

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We need to rethink wildfire in order to better protect ourselves

A wildfire on a Hawaiian island might appear at first glance like an anomaly. But the factors that created it—heat, drought, and wind—make fires like this one a possibility across much of America. Driven by a changing climate, a century of forest mismanagement, and more development in fire–prone areas, devastating fires are becoming the norm. Those dramatic images can leave us feeling powerless in the overwhelming force of fire. But that doesn’t have to be the case.

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The impossible fight to stop Canada’s wildfires

Today, many of Canada’s Indigenous people are frustrated with governments’ “two-tiered system,” which often prohibits cultural burning while appropriating Indigenous fire knowledge for use on massive prescribed fires. “There’s a lot of concern that agencies will come and extract the knowledge that they want and put it into their agency practices, but then Indigenous people still won’t be at the table,” says Cardinal Christianson.

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How climate change stoked Canada's record-breaking wildfires

The hot, dry conditions that fueled the blazes were at least twice as likely because of the influence of human-caused global warming. And they were at least 20 percent more intense than they would have been in a world without climate change.
The research consortium World Weather Attribution, which investigates the links between climate change and individual extreme weather events, released the findings Tuesday.

The new study found that Indigenous communities, as well as remote, difficult-to-access communities, were disproportionately affected by this summer’s wildfires. Limited resources and geographic barriers to wildfire response teams made them more vulnerable.

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Living with wildfire: How to protect more homes as fire risk rises in a warming climate

Wildfire is scary for good reason, and over a century of fire suppression efforts has conditioned people to expect wildland firefighters to snuff it out. But as journalist Nick Mott and I explore our new book, “This Is Wildfire: How to Protect Your Home, Yourself, and Your Community in the Age of Heat,” and in our podcast “Fireline,” this expectation and the approach to wildfire will have to change.
Over time, extensive fire suppression has set the stage for the increasingly destructive wildfires we see today.

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A ‘perfect storm’ set Hawaii ablaze. Experts say it could happen almost anywhere

The advancement of wildland and urban conflagrations is being accelerated by global warming, Pyne said, which is like “putting the system on steroids.” But he added that worsening wildfires are also influenced by the ways in which humans interact with the landscape, manage agriculture and organize their cities and economies, among other choices. “It’s not just that it’s either land use or climate that’s affecting it — they’re both being shifted by our conversion to fossil fuels and fossil biomass” such as asphalt, plastics and petrochemicals, he said. “My sense is that that has accelerated what I regarded as a slow-motion Pyrocene into a fast-maturing one.”

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