Reporter Tom Beal has three stories and a series of sidebars about some of the latest thinking on fire management and the challenge of altering the long-cherished notion that all fire is bad and must be banished from the ecosystem.
The series is reminiscent of work done over the last several years by the Andrus Center for Public Policy, including the Center's report - The Fires Next Time. Following a major conference in 2003, the Andrus Center report made the case that changes in public policy must be accelerated in the direction of managing forest ecosystems more aggressively, including restoring fire to it rightful place in the management mix.
A good deal of the Center's fire work has been informed by Stephen Pyne, perhaps the nation's foremost historian of fire. Pyne keynoted that 2003 Andrus conference and he continues to call for more rapid change in fire policy.
Pyne wrote recently in the context of major southern California fires: "Like economic transactions, fire is not a substance but a reaction – an exchange. It takes its character from its context. It synthesizes its surroundings. Its power derives from the power to propagate. To control fire, you control its setting, and you control wild fire by substituting tame fire."
Most of the smartest people who think and plan for handling wild land fire know that we "control wild fire by substituting tame fire," but the process of changing a hundred years of policy does not move, unfortunately, as quickly as a western wild fire.
By the way, while Steve Pyne is a celebrated author of much excellent material on fire, he has also authored a marvelous little book on the majestic Grand Canyon in northern Arizona where he spent time as a firefighter. How the Canyon Became Grand is a great read for anyone who loves that awesome ditch.