• Home
  • About Us
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
  • News
    • Latest News
    • Real Estate
    • Q&A
    • Business Profiles
    • Networking
    • Public Record
    • Opinion
      • Our View
  • Real Estate & Construction
    • Latest News
    • Top Properties
    • Building Permits
    • Building Tri-Cities
  • Special Publications
    • Book of Lists
    • Best Places to Work
    • People of Influence
    • Young Professionals
    • Hanford
    • Energy
    • Focus: Agriculture + Viticulture
    • Focus: Construction + Real Estate
  • E-Edition
  • Calendar
    • Calendar
    • Submit an Event
  • Journal Events
    • Senior Times Expo
    • Young Professionals
      • Sponsor Young Professionals
    • Best Places to Work
      • Sponsor BPTW
    • People of Influence
      • Sponsor People of Influence
    • Tri-Cities Workforce Forum
      • Sponsor TC Workforce Forum
  • Senior Times
    • About Senior Times
    • Read Senior Times Stories
    • Senior Times Expo
    • Obituaries and Death Notices
Home » Forest fires aren’t pausing just because there’s a pandemic

Forest fires aren’t pausing just because there’s a pandemic

September 14, 2020
Guest Contributor

Not only is the world in the grasp of the Covid-19 pandemic, but America’s western wildlands are burning up as well.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom told reporters his state has dual crises: the massive wildfire complexes and the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

“At this time last year, California had seen 4,292 fires that burned 56,000 acres. So far this year, we’ve had 7,002 fires that have burned a whopping 1.4 million acres,” he said.

California reports more than 660,000 coronavirus cases.

In Washington, the gigantic Evans Canyon Fire burned more than 110 square miles between Naches and Ellensburg spewing thick smoke and ash northeastward.

Wildfires threaten lives.

Last year, an inferno swiftly swept through Paradise, California, killing 95 people. This September, National Guard helicopters swooped into the Mammoth Reservoir campgrounds east of Fresno just in time to rescue over 200 trapped campers.

In 2017, the Eagle Creek Fire in the Columbia River Gorge closed Interstate 84, delayed truck, rail and barge shipments, and added a thick layer of greenhouse gases, choking smoke and soot blanketing our region.

Southwestern Washington’s air quality reached its highest hazard level in history prompting school closures.

Mammoth forest fires have been around for centuries.

In a single week in September 1902, the Yacolt Burn engulfed more than a half-million acres and killed 56 people in the Columbia River Gorge and around Mount St. Helens.

The smoke was so thick that ships on the Columbia River were forced to navigate by compass and the streetlights in Seattle, 160 miles to the north, glowed at noon.

Forest fires are part of nature, but they are getting more dangerous and expensive to fight.  As fires increase in size and intensity, suppression, environmental restoration and mitigation costs soar.

U.S. News reports the Department of Interior, most notably the U.S. Forest Service, spent an all-time high last year of more than $2.9 billion combating fires. That’s more than 12 times what was spent on suppression efforts in 1985.

Insurance claims have topped $12 billion for the November 2019 wildfires in California, making them the most expensive in state history.

That is a growing problem as our nation is being swallowed up by a skyrocketing national debt.

It will soon will top $27 trillion thanks largely to the Covid-19 response meaning each American taxpayer would have to pony up $215,000 if our creditors called for immediate repayment.

John Bailey, a professor of forest management at Oregon State University, told the Associated Press that megafires, those consuming 156 square miles, are increasing. 

He believes “part of the solution is thinning forests through logging, prescribed burns and allowing naturally occurring fires to be managed instead of extinguished.”

Cutting diseased, dead and fire damaged trees is not new. In intermountain forests (eastern Washington, Idaho, Montana, and British Columbia), loggers once salvaged beetle-killed trees and sent them to rural sawmills to be cut into two-by-fours.

That practice was severely curtailed 30 years ago,

Knowing that mature trees are most susceptible to insects and disease, public forest managers once designed timber sales on small tracts as fire breaks.  The logging and subsequent cleanup removed forest fuels which, in recent years, have been allowed to accumulate.

Harvesting helped fund replanting and fire access road construction. Environmental mitigation techniques have dramatically improved resulting in clean water and unencumbered access for fish returning to natural spawning grounds.

Megafires are polluting our air, endangering our health and safety, and burning a bigger hole in our pocketbooks. By thinning, salvaging and logging, we could not only save expenses, but create jobs and bring in needed revenue to government.

It really is time to revisit the way we are managing our forests.

Don C. Brunell is a business analyst, writer and columnist.  He retired as president of the Association of Washington Business and now lives in Vancouver. He can be contacted at [email protected].

 

    Local News
    KEYWORDS september 2020
    Guest contributor 1 300x300
    Guest Contributor

    4 ways to model calm, confidence and clarity

    More from this author
    Free Email Updates

    Daily and Monthly News

    Sign up now!

    Featured Poll

    What is your biggest business concern heading into 2026?

    Popular Articles

    • Javis chicken  churros 2
      By TCAJOB Staff

      Recent newcomer to Tri-City restaurant scene moving out

    • Solgen1
      By Ty Beaver

      Solgen to lay off employees, close WA operations in 2026

    • July bouten
      By TCAJOB Staff

      Latest Providence layoffs hit Richland, Walla Walla hospitals

    • Complete suite
      By TCAJOB Staff

      Richland furniture gallery closing down

    • Moses lake groff
      By Ty Beaver

      Tri-City builder, architect face lawsuit in school construction project

    • News Content
      • Latest news
      • Real Estate & Construction
      • Public records
      • Special publications
      • Senior Times
    • Customer Service
      • Our Readers
      • Subscriptions
      • Advertise
      • Editorial calendar
      • Media Kit
    • Connect With Us
      • Submit news
      • Submit an event
      • E-newsletters
      • E-Edition
      • Contact
    • Learn More
      • About Us
      • Our Events
      • FAQs
      • Privacy Policy
      • Spokane Journal of Business

    Mailing Address: 8656 W. Gage Blvd., Ste. C303  Kennewick, WA 99336 USA

    MCM_Horiz.png

    All content copyright © 2025 Mid-Columbia Media Inc. All rights reserved.
    No reproduction, transmission or display is permitted without the written permissions of Mid-Columbia Media Inc.

    Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing