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Hilger Valley Fire near Helena mostly contained, human caused
Hilger Valley Fire near Helena mostly contained, human caused

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

Hilger Valley Fire near Helena mostly contained, human caused

DNRC Type 2 Helicopter scooping water from a pond during the Hilger Valley wildfire near Helena, MT in June 2025. (DNRC photo) A fire near Helena is now 77% contained and was found to be human caused, according to a state press release this week. Crews completed a line around the Hilger Valley fire on Thursday and were looking for hot spots. Helicopters were used throughout the week to make water drops on the fire, getting their water from nearby Upper Colter Lake. The fire was initially spotted on Monday and quickly grew through the afternoon before crews were able to get a handle on it. The blaze was listed at 295 acres as of Friday morning. At its peak, nearly 200 personnel were assigned to work the fire. The Hilger Valley Fire is 20 miles north of Helena, east of Interstate 15 near the Gates of the Mountains exit. The fire cost around $1.5 million to fight and threatened communication infrastructure, according to the National Interagency Fire Center's daily fire report. It's expected to be contained by June 20, the report added. The DNRC County Assist Team gave control back to Helena DNRC on Thursday, which will monitor the fire during the coming days. Several early fires, including one near Wisdom and another near Plains have burned several thousand acres in Montana already this year. Fire officials have said the May and June wildfire starts are early and crews are expecting a long fire season. Canadian fires, bringing smoke, have already burned more than 7 million acres this year. 'It's June, and rising heat and low humidity are drying out grasses, brush, and trees—making them easier to ignite and faster to burn,' the state press release said. 'Stay alert and visit to learn how to prevent wildfires. One spark is all it takes.'

Audit report suggests changing wildfire protection fee structure
Audit report suggests changing wildfire protection fee structure

Yahoo

time11-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Audit report suggests changing wildfire protection fee structure

The Big Knife Fire outside of Arlee, Montana, on the afternoon of Sunday, July 30, 2023. (Photo by Nicole Girten, Daily Montanan) Landowners in Montana are not paying their fair share of wildfire costs to the tune of at least $30 million, according to a new report from the Legislative Audit Division. An audit of the state's Wildfire Assessment Program found problems with the funding structure for fighting wildfires and made suggestions to the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation and the Legislature to overhaul the system. The Wildfire Assessment Program is overseen by the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. Fees are assessed to some property owners in high-risk fire areas, but the report noted the state gives an 'estimated annual subsidy of over $30 million' to private landowners. It said the payment split in Montana is more than six decades old, and not at all even, with landowners are paying just 10% of fire costs. Best practices, which the report based on extensive interviews and document review, would have them paying more than 90%. Montana spent more than a half billion dollars on fire suppression from 2002 to 2023. Suppression is one of three wildfire activities in which the state partakes — mitigation and readiness are also places where it spends money on fires. In 2023, for example, the state spent $41 million on fires — $4.5 million on attempts to mitigate risk and damage from fires, $13.5 million on capacity and ability to dispatch firefighters and then $23.1 million on actual suppression efforts. Landowners do not pay the state for suppression efforts. The report suggested some fixes, including shifting the burden of wildland fire protection to those who live in the most dangerous areas. Statewide, landowners paid just $4.3 million on wildfire protection fees in 2023. Their cost is also calculated out of the 'readiness' portion of money spent on fires, not mitigation or suppression. This categorization leads to issues, the report noted. 'Applying the proportions to the readiness budget instead of total wildfire protection decreases the amount landowners are responsible for paying and increases economic inefficiency,' the report stated. The DNRC said it has 'historically excluded' response and suppression efforts from its definition of 'wildland fire protection,' whereas the report's findings look to combine preventative measures with active firefighting where funding is concerned. DNRC director Amanda Kaster said in a letter in response to the audit that it 'proposes a significant philosophical shift' in the state fire program's funding structure. The report also suggested the agency isn't always following statute, while the DNRC said it interprets the laws differently. 'The Montana Legislature and stakeholders have confirmed and reinforced this distinction since the creation of the fire suppression fund in 2007, which is designated primarily for wildland fire suppression activities,' Kaster wrote in response to the audit. 'In contrast, the program base budget for wildland fire protection work has been widely understood to be intended for conducting work related to preparedness. The audit report fails to recognize this distinction and risks misrepresenting the DNRC's efforts to comply with statute.' This matters for landowners, because the report makes a case they should be paying for more than preemptive mitigation. The report said best practice would be for private landowners to pay 92% of wildfire suppression, readiness and mitigation costs. That number is currently about 10% and does not include suppression. According to the report, applying state law as written would ask landowners to completely cover mitigation efforts, which would increase landowner contribution to 33% of wildfire cost. Kaster asked for clarification from the legislature on several terms, including 'annual operation assessment plan,' 'fire protection costs,' and 'state's portion of the cost.' She also said it was the Legislature's job to make decisions about what people are paying, not the DNRC. 'The DNRC does not believe it is our responsibility, nor do we have the appropriate standing, to make recommendations on how or why the cost burden of the program is shared amongst Montanans,' Kaster wrote. 'Ultimately, it is the legislature that chooses how to fund this work, and it is our obligation to respond to wildfires on behalf of the State of Montana.' Kaster also noted an upcoming wildland firefighting study, passed as House Bill 70 this session, will lead to 'further clarification' and funding expectations. Fees collected from property owners come mainly from fire protection districts, where residents who contribute get a more direct response. Some property owners within these districts are required to pay — according to the report, it's a $50 per-owner, per-district charge, and then a $0.30 per-acre charge for each acre owned in a district more than 20 acres. However, Gov. Greg Gianforte recently signed HB 421. That legislation increased fire protection fees for land classified as forest from $50 to $58.70 for each landowner; for those with more than 20 acres of land, there's an additional fee per acre that increased from $0.30 to $0.49. The process for deciding who has to pay is complex and is maintained by one full-time staffer with assistance from two other DNRC employees and a seasonal intern, the audit report noted. It went on to say the Fire Assessment Programs manual is also outdated, employees don't understand technical aspects of the fee program software code, and if the department lost employees who work in the program, they would be difficult to replace. 'Department staff spend significant time manually reviewing and updating information as part of the fee assignment process,' the audit noted. 'Department staff stated they cannot determine if a fee should be assigned to over 2,000 properties each year due to a lack of time to review the properties and a lack of updated property data.' The current split for fire protection costs is based on a 1958 national study by the Battelle Memorial Institute. Beyond being six decades old, it did not account for individual states, meaning what Montana is using to calculate the share isn't even based on data unique to the state. 'Recommendations include recalculating the public and private funding share, clarifying statute, and establishing a fee structure informed by cost and wildfire risk data, and improving data practices to help determine efficient funding and areas of elevated wildfire response,' the audit report stated. According to an Oct. 2024 presentation from the Legislative Fiscal Division, about 63% of all homes in Montana are in the wildland urban interface, a term used to describe high fire danger areas where natural land and housing meet. About 1.5% of Montana falls within the area considered the wildland urban interface. The presentation noted this was not the best way to assess fire risk in Montana, but did not specify why. The DNRC has the direct responsibility of protecting about 5 million acres of land in Montana. Additionally, the state also shares responsibility — primarily with local governments — for an additional 55 million acres, while the federal government is the primary responder for 33 million acres. Montana is slightly more than 94 million acres in total. FINAL-23P-06-Fire-Protection

Hilger Valley Fire burning north of Helena
Hilger Valley Fire burning north of Helena

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

Hilger Valley Fire burning north of Helena

Smoke rises from the Hilger Valley Fire burning north of Helena (Jordan Hansen / Daily Montanan) A new wildfire start was reported on Monday north of Helena and appeared to grow through the afternoon. The Montana Department of Natural Resources posted shortly before 4 p.m. a fire start had been discovered north of Helena, calling it 20 acres as of 3:30 p.m. The Hilger Valley Fire is 20 miles north of Helena, east of Interstate 15 near the Gates of the Mountains exit. Around 6 p.m. the fire's acreage jumped up to 300 acres on the incident's listing on WildCAD (Wilderness Computer-Aided Dispatch). The DNRC said on Facebook that a helicopter as well as state and local fire crews were being dispatched. The cause was undetermined, the DNRC posted and, 'Additional resources are enroute or being ordered at this time.'

Libby swim pond nearing completion
Libby swim pond nearing completion

Yahoo

time06-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Libby swim pond nearing completion

Jun. 6—Libby's new swimming pond is starting to take shape. Builders have been working on the feature for a number of months and hope to have it ready to use later this month. "It is really Marc McCully's idea and vision," Libby Parks District Manager Adam Noble said. "We hope to have it operational and open by the middle of June, but if it opens by July, we'll still be happy. For years, Libby area residents have clamored for a new pool, but a lack of financial resources made a traditional pool undoable. The swim pond, which is located next to the Libby fish pond on Fish Pond Road near the Millpond Motocross Park, is a compromise that Noble hopes people will enjoy. A 5,000-pound liner was placed in the hole Saturday, May 31. Dozens of volunteers joined others to get it in place. The pool's dimensions will be about 220-feet by 150-feet. It will be five feet depth. "According to Montana law, if it is deeper than five feet, we would need a lifeguard and the money isn't available for that," Noble said. "We'll have the appropriate signage in place that alerts everyone to the fact there is no lifeguard and the risk is theirs to use the pool." Water for the pool will be diverted from Libby Creek. Next up is to line the pond with clean sand and contour it. "Then we fill it with water," Noble said. "We need to move the access dirt to create a berm of privacy near the nature trail and build the outtake that runs into the fish pond. We're also having the DNRC cut some trees down that look like their hazardous and cleaning up any access debris, dirt, etc." Work began toward the end of winter when Libby-based Thompson Contracting began to dig the hole. But after they opted to not finish the work, announced at an April 28 park district meeting, the board opted to hire Urdahl Contracting of Libby to finish the work. Board members said Thompson didn't accept payment for the work. A number of community members have supported the swim pond effort, including Lincoln County Credit Union, the LOR Foundation and from the county and park district. "It's been in excess of $125,000, so we have a lot to be thankful for the support we've received," Noble said. The county road crew has also worked on the project. "Brent Teske was very open to my position and understanding of what it takes to get this done, so we're very appreciative of the work the county has done. It probably saved taxpayers $30,000 to $50,000," Noble said. Landscaping will also need to be done and a small nature trail has been incorporated into the plan. "Hopefully, in the future, we'll get to the point where we can have grass planted and a sandy beach," Noble said. Noble said the pool would operate the way many parks do with it opening at 6 a.m. and closing at 10 p.m. "I'm really excited about it, I think the possibilities are cool and I can't wait to see it open," Noble said.

State wildfire briefing indicates fire season ‘could be significant'
State wildfire briefing indicates fire season ‘could be significant'

Yahoo

time04-06-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

State wildfire briefing indicates fire season ‘could be significant'

DNRC Type 5 engine on the Banana Lake Fire. (Photo from Inciweb) With one fire blowing up over the weekend and an expected worse-than-average wildfire season across Montana, Gov. Greg Gianforte touted the efforts of the state Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, saying they've been able to keep 95% of wildfire starts to 10 acres or less since 2021. During an annual state fire briefing on Monday, he also recognized the 'proactive preparation, coordination and teamwork' he said was needed to keep people safe. The state has seen an early start to its fire season. Department of Natural Resources and Conservation Director Amanda Kaster said her agency is 'more prepared than ever' and thanked the legislature for the passage of wildfire bills during the session. 'The state of Montana and DNRC is prepared for the 2025 fire season, not only through our fire protection program, but through the work we do to reduce wildfire risk across Montana's landscapes,' Kaster said. The briefing also included a long-term weather forecast from Northern Rockies Coordination Center meteorologist Dan Borsum who said computer projections are calling for a dry and hot summer. He also said some weather patterns are similar to high fire danger years in the past – like 2000, 2002, 2006, 2017 and 2021. There's worry about drought impacting large portions of Montana and melted-out snowpack that places higher elevations at increased risk for fire, all of which could stretch resources. 'The multi-year deficits of moisture are starting to hurt us, the overall warm and dry summer forecast, and the fact that we may have fire on the landscape when the wind season approaches in September, because we didn't get that monsoon infusion,' Borsum said during the briefing. 'That has me very concerned that this fire season could be significant.' According to Montana has a higher risk of wildfires than 74% of states in the U.S. Additionally, Wildfire Risk reports more than half of all homes in Montana are at high risk of 'direct exposure,' which the organization defines as homes that 'may be ignited by adjacent vegetation, flying embers, or nearby structures.' A report in Government Technology this week also put Ravalli County among the highest risk for wildfire of any county in America. It said 99% of homes in the county are at 'high risk of wildfire exposure.' Fire experts say building homes out of nonflammable materials and designing them in ways that downgrade fire risk are critical to saving property. Additionally, land management practices like controlled burns, logging thinning operations and homeowners clearing brush from structures can prevent damage and make firefighters' jobs a little easier. Officials with the Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, among other land management agencies, spoke at the briefing. Several agencies shared difficulties in hiring firefighting staff for the season, but highlighted their fuels and forest management programs aimed at limiting fuels for wildfires. The Forest Service said they conducted hazardous fuels reduction work on 200,000 acres of Montana forest in 2024, the BLM conducted approximately 38,000 acres of prescribed burns last year, the Forest Service while Fish and Wildlife Service said they burned around 11,000 — an outsized number given the agency's small land presence in the state. Some fire scientists have said prescribed burns are ineffective because of their relatively small scale. While fire prevention was part of the discussion, so was fighting fire — something being talked about at the national level, too. In Washington, D.C. this week, U.S. Sen. Tim Sheehy, R-Montana, helped push a bipartisan wildfire bill through Congress. The Aerial Firefighting Enhancement Act passed through both chambers and is headed to President Donald Trump's desk. The bill reauthorizes the sale of both airplanes and parts from the Department of Defense for aerial firefighting efforts. Sheehy founded a company that provides aerial firefighting services. 'Eliminating bureaucratic obstacles to fight wildfires more quickly and aggressively is America First common sense, and I appreciate my colleagues in the House and Senate for their support,' Sheehy said in a press release. 'I look forward to seeing this bipartisan bill cross the finish line so we can better support the brave first responders on the front lines fighting wildfires across the country.' Banana Lake update As of Wednesday, the Banana Lake fire near Plains was listed at 929 acres and 15% containment. Nick Holloway with the Western Montana All Hazards Incident Management Team and spokesperson for efforts on the fire said that four structures had been protected. He also added crews were in the process of mop-up operations, though the situation has been complex. Crews had to deal with seven spot fires on Tuesday, which Holloway said had been a 'huge concern,' though firefighters had contained those blazes. Additionally, the edge of the fire is a mix of burned and unburned materials, a situation they call a 'dirty burn.' It means there's more potential for spotting, which is the process in which sparks and embers get carried by the wind into unburned fuel. 'There could be a spark in one of those unburned pockets, and it's close to the edge,' Holloway said. 'And so during the mop-up efforts, they're going through that, gridding the area to look for residual sources of heat and extinguish them. But it takes a lot longer when you have that dirty burn than when you have a nice, clean edge.' Holloway said the Banana Fire represents a relatively early start to Montana's fire season, and cautioned that the state could be in for a long year. 'Predictive Services has told us it's going to be dry and warm, more so than normal,' Holloway said. 'So that's going to be problematic for this fire season.'

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