Thursday, July 29, 2021

DEC Deploys Second Ranger to Assist in Western Wildfires

wildfireNew York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) announced Tuesday that a second DEC Forest Ranger has been deployed to Montana to assist in fighting western wildfires. Monday, New York State welcomed home Forest Ranger Timothy Carpenter at the end of his two-week assignment fighting the Bootleg Fire raging in Oregon.

Ranger Carpenter, from Steuben County, began his assignment July 10, when he joined more than 2,000 federal, state, and local fire agencies battling the Bootleg Fire in Oregon. The Bootleg Fire started on July 6 and has burned more than 400,000 acres. It is now approximately 53 percent contained. Sustained winds and low humidity make this a difficult fire to get under control. The fire has already destroyed more than 200 buildings, forcing the evacuation of about 2,000 people.

The second Forest Ranger deployed for a two-week assignment is headed to the Alder Creek Fire in Montana. The Alder Creek Fire has burned nearly 6,000 acres of land. Because of its proximity to hundreds of homes and buildings, it is now considered the nation’s highest wildland firefighting priority.

Wildland fires in western states are not only devastating to the western U.S., they are also impacting New York’s air quality. On July 20, the entire state of New York was under an Air Quality Health Advisory due to fine particulate matter caused by fires in Canada and the western U.S. Today, an Air Quality Health Advisory was issued for the New York City Metro region. Air Quality Health Advisories are issued when DEC meteorologists predict levels of pollution, either ozone or fine particulate matter, are expected to exceed an Air Quality Index (AQI) value of 100. Exposure to fine particulate matter can cause short-term health effects such as irritation to the eyes, nose, and throat, coughing, sneezing, runny nose, and shortness of breath. Exposure to elevated levels of fine particulate matter can also worsen medical conditions such as asthma and heart disease. New York State will continue to issue advisories whenever conditions warrant to help protect public health.

All personnel and travel expenses for the New York crews are either paid directly by the U.S. Forest Service or reimbursed to New York State based on a mutual aid agreement between states and federal land agencies.

Photo: New York State wildland firefighter in South Dakota in 2020, DEC file photo

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Information attributed to NYSDEC is taken from press releases and news announcements from New York State's Department of Environmental Conservation.


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One Response

  1. Vanessa B says:

    Thank you rangers!! I think the best way to support these brave folks is to take climate change with the seriousness required to keep these problems from getting worse and worse. Would we send soldiers to war without a strategy? Certainly not, yet we throw people into harms way against increasingly bad wildfires, in crazy conditions (Montana has been 100 degrees for some of the summer), and think we’re all still gonna have a future guzzling gasoline and eating all the beef we want.

    Climate deterioration is the biggest crisis humanity has ever faced. At some point we’ll get that, and demand that our government help keep humanity alive. Every day when we do not equates to more unnecessary death and suffering in the future. I hope some of the crazy weather and smoke haze we’ve seen this summer will sober up people who have not been convinced. When you can smell ponderosa pine that burned in Oregon in Boston for a cumulative week in the summer – time to admit that we’re in a crisis.

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