Controlled Burns Can Prevent Smoky Skies. Why Won't the Federal Government Approve Them?
As long as government policies continue to fan the flames of extreme wildfires, we’ll suffer the consequences.

Even though the start of summer is more than a week away, over 400 wildfires are already burning across Canada, emitting smoke that has polluted streets, parks, and neighborhoods a thousand miles away. Americans from Boston to Atlanta have suffered the effects of tiny particulate matter inflaming their lungs, getting a taste of what western state residents deal with nearly every wildfire season.
The fires spilling smoke all the way down the East Coast highlight how backward policies delay or even prevent forest restoration work that would cut wildfire risk. The two main methods, controlled burning and mechanical thinning, make forests resilient by removing fuel in methodical, deliberate ways before it goes up in smoke in much more intense wildfires. But pollution standards and excessive red tape perversely discourage these beneficial projects. Add in potential litigation from environmental groups, and fire-prone areas can be left at risk for years while projects linger in limbo.
As long as government policies continue to fan the flames of extreme wildfires, we'll suffer the consequences.
Even as New York City took on the hazy orange glow of Blade Runner last week, when it comes to legal standards, there was zero air pollution to record. Under the Clean Air Act, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sets limits for pollution that emanates from vehicle engines, factory smokestacks, and all sorts of other sources. If states exceed the standards, then they risk losing federal highway funding or facing various regulatory consequences. Smoky days from wildfires, however, are treated as "exceptional events" that do not count against pollution standards. Yet when "burn bosses" set prescribed fires at the ideal times and under the best possible conditions, the emissions do count.
The approach penalizes a beneficial practice that not only emits less pollution than wildfires but can even avoid future ones altogether. It limits opportunities to use controlled burns, especially at times when it would be most sensible to perform them—like when bad pollution days would render the additional smoke from a prescribed burn marginal. Yet federal rules make it incredibly complex, technical, and resource-intensive to have smoke from a prescribed fire exempted in the way that wildfire smoke is. States are effectively encouraged to risk the catastrophic damages of wildfires rather than employ a tool that would preemptively help mitigate them. The Government Accountability Office reports that just a single prescribed burn has been excluded from air quality standards since current ones went into effect in 2012.
Still, rather than solving this counterproductive approach, the EPA is considering tightening its restrictions—despite warnings from federal officials and fire researchers that stricter standards would further stifle the controlled burning needed to slash wildfire risk.
This comes at a time when wildfires cause up to $20 billion in economic damages annually, routinely threatening local communities, scarring ecosystems, polluting water sources, and choking the air with smoke. But even though wildfire smoke is the single largest source of fine particulate pollution, it's exempted from air quality standards. The EPA estimates that emissions from wildfires in California's San Joaquin Valley produce nearly 10 times the air pollution as agricultural dust, the second-largest source.
Man using fire to change North American landscapes is nothing new. Native Americans used to set fires to clear overgrown vegetation, make it easier to hunt and travel, and spur growth of forage plants and vegetation used in weaving.
In the early 20th century, however, the federal government decided to aggressively suppress all forest fires, whether ignited by lightning or human hand. Federal legislation outlawed the use of most intentional fire, but decades of all-out suppression turned western forests into tinderboxes. Wildfire fuel accumulated in the form of incredibly dense stands of trees and overgrown vegetation littering forest floors. A similar story played out in Canada.
Today, it often takes years to navigate environmental compliance rules before restoration projects can get started in U.S. national forests. Research from the Property and Environment Research Center (PERC) has found that some prescribed burns take an average of more than seven years to ignite from the time their environmental reviews are initiated.
One forest restoration project outside of Bozeman, Montana, was impeded for more than 15 years by a combination of federal red tape and incessant litigation from environmentalists. In addition to delays related to environmental review, the Bozeman project was held up by a court ruling known as the Cottonwood decision. Based on a 9th Circuit ruling, it forces federal agencies to redo forest-wide planning documents in some western states whenever a new endangered species is listed or "critical habitat" is designated. Sen. Angus King (I–Maine) has likened the ruling to an entire city having to redo its zoning code every time an issue arises in a single neighborhood.
Bozeman's controlled burning and thinning was impeded due to a lawsuit over a federally protected lynx, even though the specter of a catastrophic wildfire threatened to leave its residents with only three days' worth of drinking water. Yet none of the yearslong, repetitive paperwork spurred by the litigation resulted in any material change to the project. Moreover, redoing the forest-wide red tape yielded no conservation benefit to the lynx because federal agencies already modify the specifics of individual projects when new information about endangered species comes to light.
Congress passed legislation in 2018 to avoid the duplicative and illogical busy work that the Cottonwood decision requires, but it expired earlier this year. The expiration meant that nearly 100 federal land management plans became subject to litigation that could force agencies to essentially redo their homework for no tangible conservation benefit. Now, legislators are sensibly considering a new bill with bipartisan support that would clarify that federal agencies do not have to redo forest-level paperwork in such cases, saving them time and funding that can be spent in the woods mitigating fire risk.
Forests will change, and burn, whether humans choose to actively alter them or not. When people advocate for leaving forests alone, they're advocating for a management strategy whether they realize it or not. And our current strategy is leaving millions gasping for air from sea to sea.
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You want Bambi to burn to death!
Yes.
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There is a live action Bambi film in the works. Maybe this was from filming.
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Tate, controlled burns are performed all over the place by local governments. In my county, the local forest preserve district does controlled burns every year in differing parts of their preserves, usually in the marsh and prairie grass areas. Even the USDA does controlled burns in their tallgrass prairie, Midewin (2021): https://www.fs.usda.gov/detail/midewin/news-events/?cid=FSEPRD894769
The USDA Forest Service will be conducting prescribed burning throughout the coming weeks in parts of the Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie. Preparations are being made to conduct burning as weather permits. You might see smoke due to the controlled burning.
USDA Forest Service staff will initiate prescribed fire operations as weather patterns shift to favorable, modest temperatures and moderate humidity that is conducive to burning. Wind speed and direction, temperature, relative humidity and measurable moisture in vegetation are taken into consideration.
More, from a forest preserve district:
https://www.reconnectwithnature.org/conservation/prescribed-burning
Deliberately set fires were an important tool of Native Americans who used fires to hunt, improve visibility, protect themselves and their villages from wildfires, make traveling through the tallgrass prairie easier, and for many other reasons.
As the continent was populated and developed, fire was widely suppressed because of its inherently destructive impact to many human interests and its potentially deadly affect on human life. The "Smoky the Bear" campaign reflects this perspective.
In recent times, biologists have realized the benefits of fire in natural areas. Today we understand that our ecosystems and the plants within them evolved with fire, and many species are dependent on fire to maintain the habitat in which they live.
Prescribed (or "controlled") burning is a means of reintroducing this natural process. A controlled burn involves identifying the area to be burned (the "burn unit"), establishing control lines in order to prevent the fire from burning unintended areas, and intentionally setting the burn unit on fire.
Of course a prairie fire is significantly different than forest. Not really comparable but thanks for the info.
The new Fallout game looks bitchin.
When Europeans first arrived in Australia they described it as park like because the Aborigines were so good at controlled burns. Now they have massive wildfires.
Much of the mid-Atlantic USA was the same way.
Before the logging industry was run out of CA, the forests were pretty well managed without a bunch of 'kindling', meaning fires were harder to start and spread.
The watermelons drove them out and now claim the problem is 'climate change' rather than government incompetence.
The watermelons should be "harvested".
The solution is simple. Empty the prisons and send them up to the wilds of Canada, from Goose Bay to Vancouver Island, where they are to set and extinguish 'controlled burns.'
Send the "immigrants"!
Build that wall!
Fuck off and die, asshole.
The solution is an easy eco-bribe program. Ask AOC for federal legislation allowing carbon-offset controlled burns, and the EPA will get with the program.
Controlled burns won't solve this. It's about climate change! This event was unprecedented!
Oh, wait...
By the way, there's a very good exchange between some worse-than-Hitler-Republican congresscritter and federal forestry officials where the Republican brings receipts about how private forest land wasn't devastated by wildfires, but the adjacent federally managed lands were. The Republican asked how Climate change "knew" the difference and recognized the borders of the private forest lands vs federal lands. Interesting exchange.
Lemme see if I can find it.
here it is.
'How Clever Of The Climate To Know Exactly The Boundary Between Private And Federal': Tom McClintock
Excellent video. Thanks!
Same as in 1903.
https://www.newspapers.com/image/468698929/
That's 3 data points! We can establish a trend! Declining frequency...this is the wrong science.
/Climate Cult
Even as New York City took on the hazy orange glow of Blade Runner last week
Finally, the sky matches what's on the ground.
It's easy to understand why when you look at most activist leftist groups.
The steps are:
- pretend to care about said thing, and elevate that problem to the highest level of alarm
- create massive amounts of division regarding said thing, calling anyone who disagrees with you Hitler
- offer the same solution, every time: just give us more govt control, more tax dollars, and more importantly, power to lord over everyone, and we promise we will fix it
See: Racism (and the solution, antiracists), environment/climate-change (and the solution, GND eco-communism), "income inequality" (and the solution...well, regular communism).
*importantly, if the govt ever does get any kind of crack at fixing the problem, it results in expensive bureaucracy, corrupt fraudsters embezzling the taxpayer money, and no tangible improvement in anything they were trying to fix
...but I know, its redundant to add being that its all just a bunch of commies and this is always how it plays out.
It's funny how we have a system where a small, cloistered group of gnostics at the top of society are telling us that we need to give them more money, more power and more control over our lives, and in return, they'll fix the weather.
The ancient world had a similar system, but for the life of me, I can't remember what we called it.
Pharaohism?
Marcabianism?
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
MULTIPLE TRILLIONS of STOLEN MONEY wasted on making the environment worse!!!! WTF????????
Oh yeah; Because that's what [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] ALWAYS do. As-if their literally MOUNTAINS of history didn't confirm that beyond any reasonable doubt. Gov-Guns don't make sh*t!!!!
"Controlled Burns Can Prevent Smoky Skies. Why Won't the Federal Government Approve Them?"
Uh, incompetence?
Evil?
It can be both.
Solve two problems at once!
Eliminate the EPA and reduce the deficit.
Well, when they do they fuck it up.
https://www.theblaze.com/news/controlled-fire-burns-out-of-control-during-women-firefighters-training-event-at-national-park
That's just because they thought chicks were actually competent at something.
The USA's federal government can enact any policy it wants. Canada is still going to put out every single brush fire until their forest is chock full of kindling.
Children makes these decisions.
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