Managed Wildfire: A Strategy Facilitated by Civil Society Partnerships and Interagency Cooperation

Abstract Federal land managers in the United States are permitted to manage wildfires with strategies other than full suppression under appropriate conditions to achieve natural resource objectives. However, policy and scientific support for “managed wildfire” appear insufficient to support its broad use. We conducted case studies in northern New Mexico and southwestern Utah to examine how managers and stakeholders navigated shifting barriers and opportunities to use managed wildfire from 2018 to 2021. The use of managed wildfire was fostered through an active network of civil society partnerships in one case, and strong interagency cooperation and existing policies and plans in the other. In both, the COVID-19 pandemic, drought, and agency direction curtailed recent use. Local context shapes wildfire response strategies, yet centralized decision-making and policy also can enable or constrain them. Future research could refine the understanding of social factors in incident decision-making, and evaluation of risks and tradeoffs in wildfire response. Implications Managers and stakeholders seeking to restore fire’s ecological roles in their own landscapes through the use of managed wildfires could use these findings to cultivate supportive local environments for their objectives. Both case studies offer examples of how managed wildfires may be facilitated through civil society partnerships and interagency cooperation. Networks of civil society and agency partners can encourage policy change at multiple levels through concerted efforts over time, particularly by building a larger case through localized examples of collaborative projects and a body of regionally relevant scientific evidence. Strong interagency cooperation on both mitigation and response can also foster an environment of mutual understanding, even given differing missions and mandates for managed wildfire. Management implications Federal wildfire response must consider multiple objectives that may compete across scales, social-ecological contexts, and timeframes. These include minimizing negative impacts on human values, responding to immediate risks of fire exposure, managing land sustainably under longer timeframes; and meeting accomplishment targets, such as acres of hazardous fuels reduction, ecological restoration, and other resource objectives. Federal wildfires and land managers are permitted to manage wildfires for natural resource objectives but face challenges of ambiguous terminology, conflicting policies, drought, increasing numbers of homes in wildlands, and unanticipated events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Conditions, opportunities, and barriers to manage wildfire vary substantially by locality and are dependent on local actors, yet also subject to higher-level changes in policy direction. Beyond improved risk analytics and decision support tools, enabling social and internal institutional conditions may also facilitate opportunities for use of managed wildfire. Social science can provide evidence and frameworks including concrete lessons learned, expanded use of after-action reviews, process monitoring, briefings with leadership, and science application through boundary-spanning organizations.

[1]  C. Adlam,et al.  Keepers of the Flame: Supporting the Revitalization of Indigenous Cultural Burning , 2021, Society & Natural Resources.

[2]  K. Williams,et al.  Changing bushfire management practices to incorporate diverse values of the public , 2021, Environmental Science & Policy.

[3]  Sarah McCaffrey,et al.  A Mixed Methods Literature Review and Framework for Decision Factors That May Influence the Utilization of Managed Wildfire on Federal Lands, USA , 2021, Fire.

[4]  H. Huber-Stearns,et al.  Comparing social constructions of wildfire risk across media, government, and participatory discourse in a Colorado fireshed , 2021, Journal of Risk Research.

[5]  E. Knapp,et al.  Evidence for widespread changes in the structure, composition, and fire regimes of western North American forests , 2021, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.

[6]  H. Huber-Stearns,et al.  Transcending Parallel Play: Boundary Spanning for Collective Action in Wildfire Management , 2021, Fire.

[7]  E. Knapp,et al.  Pyrosilviculture Needed for Landscape Resilience of Dry Western United States Forests , 2021, Journal of Forestry.

[8]  Christopher I. Roos,et al.  Native American fire management at an ancient wildland–urban interface in the Southwest United States , 2021, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[9]  Jesse D. Young,et al.  Effects of policy change on wildland fire management strategies: evidence for a paradigm shift in the western US? , 2020, International Journal of Wildland Fire.

[10]  Brien,et al.  Prescribed fire science: the case for a refined research agenda , 2020, Fire Ecology.

[11]  A. York,et al.  Making the Transition from Science Delivery to Knowledge Coproduction in Boundary Spanning: A Case Study of the Alaska Fire Science Consortium , 2019, Weather, Climate, and Society.

[12]  C. Kolden We’re Not Doing Enough Prescribed Fire in the Western United States to Mitigate Wildfire Risk , 2019, Fire.

[13]  Anne-Lise K. Velez,et al.  The Structure of Effective Governance of Disaster Response Networks: Insights From the Field , 2018 .

[14]  Matthew P. Thompson,et al.  Rethinking the Wildland Fire Management System , 2018, Journal of Forestry.

[15]  Alexandra D. Syphard,et al.  Rapid growth of the US wildland-urban interface raises wildfire risk , 2018, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[16]  T. Spies,et al.  Wildfires managed for restoration enhance ecological resilience , 2018 .

[17]  Matthew P. Thompson,et al.  A framework for developing safe and effective large-fire response in a new fire management paradigm , 2017 .

[18]  Frank K. Lake,et al.  Returning fire to the land: celebrating traditional knowledge and fire , 2017 .

[19]  P. Hessburg,et al.  Tamm Review: Shifting global fire regimes: Lessons from reburns and research needs , 2017 .

[20]  A. Cheng,et al.  Examining the Influence of Positionality in Evaluating Collaborative Progress in Natural Resource Management: Reflections of an Academic and a Practitioner , 2017 .

[21]  H. Huber-Stearns,et al.  Sharing contracted resources for fire suppression: engine dispatch in the Northwestern United States , 2017 .

[22]  Kevin Barnett,et al.  Using risk analysis to reveal opportunities for the management of unplanned ignitions in wilderness , 2016 .

[23]  T. Hall,et al.  ‘Put the wet stuff on the hot stuff’: The legacy and drivers of conflict surrounding wildfire suppression , 2015 .

[24]  Matthew P. Thompson,et al.  Negative consequences of positive feedbacks in US wildfire management , 2015, Forest Ecosystems.

[25]  D. Lach,et al.  The Value of Practice-Based Knowledge , 2014 .

[26]  Matthew P. Thompson Social, Institutional, and Psychological Factors Affecting Wildfire Incident Decision Making , 2014 .

[27]  Eduardo S Brondízio,et al.  Indigenous Burning as Conservation Practice: Neotropical Savanna Recovery amid Agribusiness Deforestation in Central Brazil , 2013, PloS one.

[28]  Thomas G. Dietterich,et al.  Allowing a wildfire to burn: estimating the effect on future fire suppression costs , 2013 .

[29]  Sarah McCaffrey,et al.  Social science research related to wildfire management: an overview of recent findings and future research needs , 2013 .

[30]  Eugénie M. Montblanc,et al.  How Can We Span the Boundaries between Wildland Fire Science and Management in the United States , 2012 .

[31]  L. Lentile,et al.  Short- and Long-Term Effects on Fuels, Forest Structure, and Wildfire Potential from Prescribed Fire and Resource Benefit Fire in Southwestern Forests, USA , 2011 .

[32]  Loretta Pyles,et al.  The Dialectic Method: A Critical and Postmodern Alternative to the Scientific Method , 2011 .

[33]  Toddi A. Steelman,et al.  What is Limiting More Flexible Fire Management — Public or Agency Pressure? , 2011 .

[34]  Lynn A Maguire,et al.  Managing Wildfire Events: Risk‐Based Decision Making Among a Group of Federal Fire Managers , 2011, Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis.

[35]  Chick Fagan,et al.  NPS Director's Order 18 Wildland Fire Management , 2008 .

[36]  Jan W. van Wagtendonk,et al.  The History and Evolution of Wildland Fire Use , 2007 .

[37]  Lisa Dale,et al.  Wildfire Policy and Fire Use on Public Lands in the United States , 2006 .

[38]  X. Bian,et al.  Encyclopedia of Wildfires and Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) Fires , 2020 .

[39]  Christine Nadel,et al.  Case Study Research Design And Methods , 2016 .

[40]  Martha A. Williamson,et al.  Factors in United States Forest Service district rangers' decision to manage a fire for resource benefit , 2007 .

[41]  M. Patton Qualitative research & evaluation methods , 2002 .