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Politics and Disasters

Elected official involvement can be good.

US Senator Steve Daines announced the formation of a Senate Wildfire Caucus. See below for the announcement. What's significant about that—elected officials are starting to sit up and take notice of at least one hazard that is impacting people's lives and health.

The one thing not mentioned in the announcement is the need to "avoid the hazard" by not building in the middle of the hazard area—meaning the wildland fire interface zone.

Interestingly, he partnered with Senator Diane Feinstein, a Democrat, so this makes it a bipartisan effort.

Of course, once you open the door to political involvement, you never know which way the wind is going to blow. Hopefully all for good and not in a direction that makes for poor public policy.

Daines Launches Bipartisan, Bicameral Senate Wildfire Caucus

U.S. SENATE—U.S. Senator Steve Daines today announced the creation of the bipartisan, bicameral Senate Wildfire Caucus to focus on common sense forest management reform, wildland firefighter assistance, wildfire recovery efforts, and community hardening. Daines joined Senator Diane Feinstein (D-CA) and Representatives John Curtis (R-UT) and Joe Neguse (D-CO) in launching the caucus. The caucus will also elevate awareness and bipartisan consensus around wildfire management, mitigation, preparedness and recovery.

“Montanans are sick and tired of breathing in smoke. As Montana continues to face devastating wildfires season after season, we must work together to find common sense solutions that will protect our communities, first responders, forests and wildlife. If we don’t manage our forests, they’ll manage us—it’s time to get to work,” Daines said.

“Wildfires regularly spread across state borders and the devastation they cause to our communities and forests touch us all. We must work together to fight this growing threat, which is why I am pleased to partner with Senator Daines and Representatives Neguse and Curtis to make the Bipartisan Wildfire Caucus a bicameral effort. The entire American West is at risk from increasingly destructive wildfires and I look forward to this caucus promoting necessary, common sense solutions to protect our communities and the environment,” said Senator Feinstein.

The Caucus membership includes Representatives Carbajal (D-Calif), Costa (D-Calif), Garamendi (D-Calif.), Harder (D-Calif.), Huffman (D-Calif.), Issa (R-Calif.), Jacobs (D-Calif.), LaMalfa (R-Calif.), Obernolte (R-Calif.), Panetta (D-Calif.), Peters (D-Calif.), Porter (D-Calif.), Dunn (R-Fla.), Simpson (R-Idaho), Bentz (R-Ore.), Moore (R-Utah), Owens (R-Utah), Stewart (R-Utah), Newhouse (R-Wash.) and Schrier (D-Wash.); additional members are required to join in equal, bipartisan pairs.

The Bipartisan Wildfire Caucus:

  • Advocates for wildfire-related programs, including funding for disaster relief, prevention and mitigation;
  • Shares federal relief programs and resources with communities before, during and after wildfire season; and
  • Highlights balanced and bipartisan science-based wildfire management and mitigation proposals in Congress.
Eric Holdeman is a contributing writer for Emergency Management magazine and is the former director of the King County, Wash., Office of Emergency Management.