A helicopter with a water bucket battles a blaze near Stevenson, Wash. (AP photo by Randy Rasmussen) |
The legislation was needed because of an issue known as "fire borrowing." Normally, when a federal agency uses up the money budgeted for fire fighting, it must borrow money from other accounts, some of them dedicated to wildfire prevention work. The appropriations bill passed in May provided $4.2 billion for wildland firefighting and prevention programs, but costs for fighting this year's fires will cost an estimated $300 million more than that. The senators' letter asked President Trump to replenish those borrowed funds promptly when the new fiscal year begins in October so that those agencies will not face long-term budget shortfalls.
This year has been the worst wildfire season in years. Wildfires have burned across about 8 million acres of the U.S. this year, mostly in Western states. "That total exceeds the average number of acres burned annually during the prior decade, which is 5,558,384. As of Saturday, there were 67 large, active fires, affecting roughly 1.6 million acres," Lucia reports.
from The Rural Blog http://ift.tt/2xkZ6X6 Harvey aid bill also helps agencies fund fighting wildfires - Entrepreneur Generations
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