Oct 18 6:17 PM

Chasing Fire

What’s going wrong with the war on wildfires, and what are the true costs of putting them out?  Fault Lines follows the 2013 wildfire season, chasing the flames as they spread throughout the West.  

The United States now spends as much as two billion dollars a year on wildfire suppression. Fire seasons are becoming longer and more severe than ever before—increasing the threats to property and lives, and straining the federal budget.  By mid-season, there have already been 38,000 wildfires and the US Forest Service diverted $600 million from other programs to fight them. Some say it is a war on wildfires that we cannot win.  Fire intensity and the costs to American taxpayers are spinning out of control.  

Several factors bring us to this pinnacle: Climate change has intensified droughts and brought higher than average temperatures. Decades of misguided fire management policies have left many forests primed for larger, more intense fires.  And resources and priorities have shifted to protecting homes, as residential development booms in the wildlands of the American West.  The costs grow exponentially as fires become more severe and the wildland more developed.  Sprawling camps emerge overnight to house and feed thousands of firefighters on large fires.  There is often a blank check for necessary supplies, equipment and aircrafts—much of it contracted out to private companies, making wildfire suppression a profitable and growing industry.

The wildfires that ripped through forests and communities this season have caused new levels of damage and devastation.  The Black Forest Fire—the most destructive in Colorado’s history—destroyed nearly 500 homes and killed two residents.  In Yarnell Arizona, 19 wildland firefighters died when a fast-moving brush fire overtook them.  Their deaths devastated a tight knit community and reverberated throughout the country.  Then the ferocious Rim Fire threatened Yosemite National Park and became one of the largest in California’s history, costing more than $100 million.  And the season is not over yet...

Fault Lines follows the 2013 wildfire season, chasing the flames as they spread throughout the West.  As millions of acres continue to burn each year, we examine what is going wrong with the war on wildfires and the true costs of putting them out.

Friday at 9:30 EST

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Credits:
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Mathieu Skene SENIOR PRODUCER: Carrie Lozano @carrielozano CORRESPONDENT: Sebastian Walker @sebwalker PRODUCERS: Singeli Agnew @singeli, Lauren Rosenfeld @lollymr DP: Zachary Stauffer, Singeli Agnew, Mike Anderson, Tim Walton RESEARCH AND PRODUCTION ASSISTANCE: Yousur Alhou, Dariel Medina, Rachel Witte, Murphy Joseph Woodhouse @MurphyWoodhouse EDITORS: Jeff Springer, Warwick Meade

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