Oregon state leaders send forestry department extra $47.5M to cover mounting wildfire costs

By Alex Baumhardt (Oregon Capital Chronicle)
Sept. 26, 2024 7:55 p.m.
The Rail Ridge Fire south of Dayville in Grant County scorched more than 135,000 acres.

The Rail Ridge Fire south of Dayville in Grant County scorched more than 135,000 acres.

Courtesy of Grant County Emergency Management

The Oregon Department of Forestry is getting help from the state’s general fund to pay its bills after a record wildfire season.

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The Legislative Emergency Board voted Wednesday to send $47.5 million to the forestry department to help cover the costs of the 2024 wildfire season. Spending on wildfires so far this year has topped nearly $250 million, about 2.5 times the amount budgeted for the forestry department and the State Fire Marshal’s Office for wildfire response.

“The Department of Forestry has done incredible work fighting these fires under difficult weather conditions and with personnel and resources stretched thin across multiple states,” Senate President Rob Wagner, D-Lake Oswego, said in a news release.

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About half of the $47.5 million was previously earmarked for a potentially expensive wildfire season, while $20 million was appropriated as emergency funding by the board, made up of 10 representatives and 10 senators.

Related: Nearly five months in, Oregon wildfire season expected to last into mid-October

There have been more than 2,000 fires this year that have scorched nearly 2 million acres — a record in the state and more than three times the 10-year average for acres burned. Gov. Tina Kotek has invoked the Conflagration Act 17 times this year — a new record — with the latest on Sept. 10 for the Service Fire in Wheeler County. The previous record was in 2020 when Kotek invoked the act 16 times, said John Hendricks, a spokesman for the fire marshal. The act unleashes resources to fight blazes that threaten lives, communities or key infrastructure.

Kotek also asked for federal help and regulatory flexibility for farmers and ranchers who have lost land used for animals and plants, while urging Congress to pass a spending bill to fully fund federal agencies and increase firefighter pay.

The state will likely wrap up its now five-month long fire season in mid-October, according to experts. Projections from the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center, which coordinates wildfire resources, indicate the state could face one or two more high-risk days before the 2024 wildfire season is over.

Related: Rain helps as Central Oregon fires threaten 6,000 structures

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