Thursday, October 03, 2013

Despite Shutdown, Rim Fire Recovery Moves Forward

National parks across the country may be off-limits to visitors due to the government shutdown, but in the Sierra, it hasn’t stopped efforts to recover from the Rim Fire. A crew of around 50 fire response specialists are still on the job in the Stanislaus National Forest and in Yosemite National Park. “We have an emergency situation going on, so we have funding for emergency stabilization treatments during the furlough because of life and property and safety - so we are allowed to continue to work,” says Anna Payne, a spokeswoman for the Burned Area Emergency Response effort of the Forest Service. A few weeks ago the team received $300,000 for safety measures, like repairing road signs and felling hazardous burnt trees devastated by the fire. Then on Monday, hours before the government shut down, the Forest Service allocated another $4 million dollars to help prevent flooding and erosion. Firefighters are currently monitoring the last eight percent of the blaze still burning in wilderness areas between Cherry Lake and Hetch Hetchy Reservoir. Full containment is expected by Sunday. So far the fire has burned over 250,000 acres. The total fire effort has cost over $126 million...more

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