GRANTS PASS, Ore. — While more than 1,000 homes across the West burn each year in forest and brush fires, only a fraction of federal efforts to reduce fire danger in the region has been concentrated in the communities at greatest risk, a group of scientists found.
The scientists analyzed a database containing the locations of all 44,613 fuel-reduction projects undertaken in Western states by various federal agencies under the National Fire Plan from its start in 2000 through 2008. They found that only 3 percent of those projects were within what is known as the wildland-urban interface.
Wildland-urban interface is a term for areas where suburban and rural homes meet forests and rangelands. The National Fire Plan is a program that is intended to reduce the risk of wildfire to communities.
The scientists found that 11 percent of those fuel-reduction projects were within an area that includes the wildland-urban interface plus a 1.5-mile buffer strip around it.
That is far short of the 50 percent goal set by the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003, which was supposed to help control the $1 billion regularly spent each year fighting wildfires.
Wildfires burned 5.3 million acres in the U.S. in 2008.
"We're going to have to adapt to these large fires as a way of life," said Tania Schoennagel, a fire ecologist at the University of Colorado and lead author of the study, appearing in Tuesday's edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"Fire suppression is doing an outstanding job, but there is only so much they can do," she said. "So we are probably going to continue to have more home losses unless we have communities more adapted to fire."
That means helping homeowners fireproof their homes by clearing trees and brush around them and using building materials that don't burn, such as metal roofs, she said.
"With crime, we lock our doors and we get a security system," she said. "With earthquakes, quake-proof construction is required in earthquake zones. We are not allowed to build in 100-year flood plains.
"But with wildfire, it's different. We don't lock our homes down to fire."
From 2002 through 2006, 10,000 homes nationwide were destroyed by wildfire, the study noted.
Joe Walsh, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service, said the agency had just received the report and was still reviewing it: "Once that review is finished, we'll have a comment."
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