Where there鈥檚 smoke, there鈥檚 fire 鈥 and political unity
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| Sacramento, Calif.
The acrid smoke from massive wildfires that ignited in rural eastern Washington last Labor Day weekend drifted over the Cascades before blanketing the state鈥檚 populous western flank. Ashen clouds darkened the skies above Seattle, Tacoma, and the capital, Olympia, looming like a rebuke of state lawmakers for failing to alleviate a worsening wildfire crisis.
The memory of lingered after the haze cleared, and when the Legislature convened in January, a sense of urgency 鈥 and unity 鈥 prevailed in the statehouse. Republicans joined with Democrats to unanimously approve a wide-ranging , resolving differences that had derailed similar measures the past two sessions.
The show of bipartisan support marked a victory for Hilary Franz, a Democrat and Washington鈥檚 commissioner of public lands. Since taking office in 2017, she has prodded lawmakers in both parties 鈥 Democrats control the House and Senate 鈥 to work together on wildfire legislation 鈥渂efore the Evergreen State turns charcoal black.鈥
Why We Wrote This
At a time of intense partisanship in the U.S., Western state lawmakers are forging bipartisan legislation to address the region鈥檚 wildfire crisis.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 achieve bipartisanship if you never cross the aisle,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou won鈥檛 have bipartisanship if you don鈥檛 try to listen to and understand the other side.鈥
As infernos again this summer, adding to the vast destruction witnessed in recent years, Democrats and Republicans in several states have embraced collaboration on wildfire bills as they seek to save lives, land, and homes. At a time of national polarization, when pragmatism can seem a lost art, the towering flames in Oregon, California, Arizona, Colorado, and elsewhere have forged consensus among legislators to confront a perennial threat.
Washington鈥檚 new law commits the state to spending $125 million every two years through 2029 to expand firefighting operations, nurture forest restoration, and strengthen community resilience. The long-term planning reflects an expectation that the fiery status quo will persist.
鈥淗ad last year鈥檚 fire season been average,鈥 says state Rep. Larry Springer, the Democratic deputy majority leader, 鈥渢here probably would have been less energy behind this bill. But the explosion of fire 鈥 it鈥檚 impossible for anyone to ignore.鈥
A greater willingness to agree to disagree about what propels cataclysmic wildfires has proved essential to policymakers finding common ground. Republican state Rep. Mark Klicker suggests that debating the reasons 鈥 climate change, overgrown forests, unchecked development 鈥 matters less than enacting solutions in Washington, where more than 800,000 acres burned last year.聽
鈥淓verybody has their take on what鈥檚 causing these fires. Our side says it鈥檚 forest management; the other side says it鈥檚 climate. But whatever the causes, we have a problem,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o let鈥檚 address it and do the best we can to prevent what鈥檚 happening.鈥
Shared vulnerability
Oregonians endured their own Labor Day nightmare last year when a handful of infernos erupted that weekend on the western side of the Cascades. The fires scorched some 1 million acres 鈥 more than had burned in the mountain range in the previous .
One blaze swept through the state Senate district that Jeff Golden represents, destroying 2,800 homes and other buildings and gutting the small towns of . The devastation prompted Senator Golden, a Democrat who lives in nearby Ashland, to introduce a $190 million omnibus in February to bolster fire response agencies, forest health, and community preparedness.
鈥淎fter last year,鈥 he says, 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 see how we could face our constituents if we didn鈥檛 get something done this year.鈥
Democrats hold large majorities in Oregon鈥檚 statehouse. In 2019 and again last year, Republicans staged walkouts to protest climate change proposals, scuttling in the process.
Seeking to gain bipartisan backing, Senator Golden, chairman of the Natural Resources and Wildfire Recovery Committee, agreed to compromise on a clause to win over wary Republicans. More than half the party鈥檚 caucus voted for the measure in June, and he considers that support vital for reinforcing the idea that reducing wildfire risk requires collective effort.
鈥淲ithout Republicans getting behind it, the narrative could鈥檝e quickly become that we鈥檙e the bad guys 鈥 the overreaching, nanny-state Democrats,鈥 he says. He mentions the Bootleg Fire in southern Oregon, which started less than two weeks after the bill鈥檚 approval and has burned more than 400,000 acres. 鈥淭hese fires affect everyone, so we need everyone working to prevent them.鈥
The shared vulnerability of rural and urban residents has created an ideological bridge in the Capitol, says Sean Stevens, executive director of Oregon Wild, an environmental advocacy group. 鈥淭he bipartisan nature of wildfire is interesting. No politician 鈥 Republican or Democrat 鈥 wants to tell constituents they can鈥檛 solve this problem for their communities,鈥 he says.
A and rising temperatures in the West have contributed to an increase in the intensity and magnitude of fires over the past decade. Wildfires blackened 9.5 million acres across the region last year, including almost 700,000 in Colorado, the highest total in its recorded history.
Kevin Priola, a Republican state senator, recalls campaigning door to door in a Denver suburb in October. A charred pine needle dropped from the smoke-smeared sky and landed on the file folder he held in his hands. He surmised that gusty winds carried the needle 50 to 60 miles from a blaze burning in the Front Range foothills west of the city.
The moment illuminated the inescapable reach of wildfire, and he recounts the anecdote while explaining his support for a bill to create a state fund to help communities . He cast the lone Republican vote in favor of the measure that passed in June.
鈥淎s policymakers, we often get tagged as reactive 鈥 we change the law after the public changes its habits,鈥 he says. 鈥淲ith this legislation, we鈥檙e looking ahead. There鈥檚 no time to wait.鈥
A growing focus on prevention
Federal and state firefighting agencies have followed an aggressive wildfire suppression strategy on public and private lands for more than a century. The policy of dousing most wildland fires as quickly as possible has wrought forests, grasslands, and shrublands choked with overgrowth and primed to burn as the climate turns warmer and drier.
The lopsided emphasis on suppression over prescribed burning and other preemptive treatments that could lower the wildfire threat has pushed state lawmakers to seek legislative remedies.
In New Mexico, a bill to ease restrictions on conducting on private land received nearly unanimous support in March. A comparable measure appears headed for bipartisan approval in California a year after fires torched a record 4.2 million acres, including five of the six largest blazes in state history.
The spirit of cooperation has spread to Congress, where a group of Western lawmakers formed the Bipartisan Wildfire Caucus earlier this year. Two of its members 鈥 one Democrat, one Republican 鈥 have co-sponsored a bill to increase prescribed burning on public and private lands.
More broadly, the bipartisan infrastructure bill now wending its way through the House and Senate would pump billions of dollars into wildfire prevention and climate resilience programs. The funding would aid forest restoration through prescribed burning and 鈥渆cologically appropriate鈥 timber harvesting, and provide 鈥渄efense grants鈥 to communities to prepare for and ward off the flames.
The state and federal initiatives reveal a growing inclination among elected officials to redress the spiraling effects of fire even as discussing the root causes remains thorny.聽
鈥淭here鈥檚 a general recognition of the wildfire problem and a general recognition of some of the solutions,鈥 says Lynn Scarlett, chief external affairs officer for The Nature Conservancy. 鈥淪o even if not everyone is saying 鈥榗limate change,鈥 steps are being taken to address it.鈥
State lawmakers in Washington avoided an ideological fight over wildfire prevention by separating that bill from more contentious proposals that explicitly . For Rep. Tom Dent, a Republican who represents a rural district that stretches across central and eastern Washington, the smoky skies in the West offer a clear view of the need to act.
鈥淲e can argue about climate change and what it means and where it鈥檚 going,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut right now, we have to deal with the wildfire epidemic.鈥