Salem, Ore. – Ten project proposals in Oregon, including one by the Oregon Department of Forestry, have been selected to be funded by the Community Wildfire Defense Grant (CWDG). The proposals focus on assisting communities in developing Community Wildfire Protection Plans (CWPP), and funds immediate actions to reduce wildfire risk for communities that already have an active CWPP, key roadmaps for addressing wildfire risks locally.
Funded by President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the CWDG program helps communities, tribes, non-profit organizations, state forestry agencies and Alaska Native corporations plan for and mitigate wildfire risks as the nation faces an ongoing wildfire crisis. Scoring priority was given to project proposals that are in an area identified as having a high or very-high wildfire hazard potential, benefit a low-income community or are located in a community impacted by a severe disaster within the previous 10 years that increased wildfire risk.
Of those that applied, the states with the largest dollar amount for their communities were Oregon, California and Washington.
Examples of proposals that have been selected for funding include:
Oregon Department of Forestry, John Day; Grant County Defensible Space
$681,041 to focus on 300 acres of fuels reduction treatments for Grant County landowners in the wildland-urban interface (WUI), installation of Firewise Communities, and outreach and education in the high-risk communities of John Day, Mt. Vernon, Prairie City, Dayville, Granite, Monument, Canyon City, Long Creek and Seneca.
Klamath Watershed Partnership, Chiloquin Wildfire Risk Reduction and Education
$616,404 to implement 165 acres of defensible space treatments over five years; to develop and implement a “Brush Dump” program; to design, purchase, and deploy a multi-use wildfire education trailer for community education and outreach events, and a mobile information distribution point during a wildfire as needed; and to build capacity and sustainability within Chiloquin Fire and Rescue through development of a part-time Mitigation Specialist position to coordinate the activities of this project and to plan future projects.
Douglas Electric Cooperative Fuels Treatments, Vegetation Management, and Other Mitigation
$9,151,505 to reduce fuel buildup in high-risk wildfire areas, enhance the utility right-of-way’s ability to function as fire breaks, increase forest health, and minimize the probability that Douglas Electric’s transmission and distribution system may be the origin or contributing source for the ignition of a fire. Funding from this program will enable DEC to reduce its vegetation management program to a 3-to-4-year cycle while addressing hazard trees (snags and cycle busters) not in the traditional utility space.
ODF has partnered with other organizations around the state whose applications have been selected for funding and will provide support for their proposals through various avenues.
The 2023 application period for additional grant awards is planned to open spring of 2023. Revised guidance for 2023 will be posted when received from the USDA Forest Service. The 2022 eligibility flowchart and 2022 CWDG Program fact sheet remain helpful tools to plan for the upcoming 2023 application process.
Oregon Department of Forestry’s (ODF) Partenavia P-68 Observer has had many uses in the last 40 years, but its most recent function is as the platform for the department’s nighttime wildfire detection work. Using night vision and an FLIR camera system that is paired with an augmented reality mapping system, this multi-mission aircraft (MMA) allows for quick detection and response to dozens of wildfires every year.
During fire season, the Partenavia flies at night looking for signs of wildfires started by lightning. What makes this system unique and successful is the marrying of several technologies that couldn’t do the job on their own. ODF uses night-vision goggles (NVGs) and infrared sensors to initially spot suspected new fires. Then a laser pointer that is only visible in the NVGs, is used to communicate the exact position of the possible new fire to the observer/camera operator. Finally, the observer uses the infrared sensors and the high-power zoom to confirm whether it is actually a new fire and not another light source. Using any of these tools alone would be only fractionally as effective and take up more valuable time.
“As far as I’m aware, we’re one of the first states combining night vision and infrared into our aircraft to detect fires early,” Cole Lindsay, aviation coordinator for ODF’s Northwest Oregon Area, which protects approximately 3.5 million acres of forestland in northwestern Oregon from wildfire. “Using these tools together allows us to fly at night after a thunderstorm, find small fires in remote areas, and then send detailed information to our dispatch center so that they can send out the appropriate resources to extinguish the fire.”
Once the point is determined to be a new fire it get documented and reported. The observer views the location in a map screen and the augmented reality system (ARS), which overlays all known information like roads, streams and names, onto the video screen as if they were on the ground. The still images and videos on these two screens give a sense of where the fire is and what it is doing. Going a step further, attributes of the fire are drawn and labeled on the video screen, and ARS turns those into data points and polygons.
During the summer months, the aircraft is centrally based in Redmond, Oregon to allow access to the entire state. Using the MMA catch fires early is just one of the ways that ODF works to prevent larger wildfires.
In the 2022 fire season, the MMA detected 69 fires, 60of which were detected during extreme fire danger. The early detection of these fires helped to prevent the majority of them from growing into larger fires. Out of the 69 total detections, none of the fires on ODF-protected lands grew larger than 10 acres. Over the span of the season, ODF pilots and operators banked approximately 92 hours in the sky in search of new fire starts, the most in one night being 21 detections.
The MMA is also used as ‘eyes in the sky’ for incidents. The MMA provides a valuable aerial perspective and facilitates the gathering information including the fire perimeter, possible helispots, and the attributes and behavior of the fire that can be loaded into a map for the ground crews to use. The information gathered is provided to the ground as a complete package that allows ground forces to view, strategize, and attack the fire with more situational awareness than they would have otherwise. In the 2022 season, the Partenavia executed four of these mapping missions.
“We’re very proud of our achievements using the Partenavia,” said Neal Laugle, ODF Aviation Unit manager. “However, with the high demand for the resource, it’s difficult to meet the needs of the entire state with just one aircraft, which leaves our team having to prioritize certain areas over others during times of extreme fire danger in the state.”
Though the aircraft and program received investments in the 2021 Oregon Legislative Session, there is still plenty of room to grow.
“A wish list item for our program would be another multi-mission aircraft to better support the entire state, and to create a backup for the agency since the Partenavia is 40 years old. The aircraft is not getting any younger, and with that age comes more maintenance,” said Laugle.