For Immediate Release: May 21, 2009
Contact: Frank Quimby
(202) 208-6416
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced today that the Department would invest $15 million under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to fund 55 projects that will reduce hazardous fuels on thousands of acres of federal land to protect communities at [...]
The Department of the Interior will invest $15 million under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to fund 55 projects that will reduce hazardous fuels on thousands of acres of federal land to protect communities at risk from wildland fires, support local economies and rehabilitate ecosystems damaged by wildfire. The funding is part of $3 billion Interior is investing in the nation’s economy under President Obama’s recovery plan.
A rigorous merit-based process was used to identify investments that met the criteria put forth in the Recovery Act: namely, that a project addresses the Department’s highest priority mission needs; generates the largest number of jobs in the shortest period of time; and creates lasting value for the American public.
All the hazardous fuels reduction projects are long-standing priorities of the Department’s Wildland Fire Management program that:
- Increase firefighter and public safety
- Reduce threats to homes, businesses, schools, other valuable infrastructure
and cultural and natural resources - Conserve municipal watersheds
- Help preserve jobs dependent on natural resources
- Uphold environmental quality
- Enhance effective use of Federal, State, Tribal, and local skills and resources
- Lower the threat of pollution from particulates
- Reduce smoke impacts from wildfire.
The final selection criteria ensured project planning and environmental compliance work was complete or substantially complete and that projects have the potential to provide additional economic benefits to support local or regional employment through post-treatment use of biomass in wood products or power generation.
Under the Department’s Wildland Fire Management program, fuels reduction treatments thin overgrown woodlands, reduce accumulated deadwood and dense underbrush to lessen the potential for intense wildland fire and post-fire damage, and limit the proliferation and spread of invasive species and diseases.
Office of Wildland Fire Projects by State
Alaska $700,000
- Kenai Biomass
Arizona $1,270,000
- Las Cienegas NCA-Mesquite Utilization/Stewardship
- Shiprock WUI
- Redrock WUI
- San Carlos HFR Biomass Project
California $3,330,000
- Stones Bengard Biomass for Cogeneration
- International Border Fuel Break/Biomass Utilization
- Desert Restoration/ Biomass Utilization
- South Coast Hazardous Fuels Reduction/Biomass Utilization
- Tuledad Warner Mtn Hazardous Fuel Reduction
- Fandango Juniper Hazardous Fuel Reduction/Biomass Utilization
- Shasta Fire Mgt Unit WUI Hazardous Fuel Reduction
- Dos Palmas Desert Habitat Restoration/ Biomass Utilization
- Protecting natural and historic resources, and at-risk adjacent communities from catastrophic wildfires
Idaho $667,000
- Elk City WUI Hazardous Fuel Reduction
- Bannock Peak Hazardous Fuels Reduction
- Kilgore-Moose WUI Forest Restoration
- Carmen-Freeman Creek Forest Restoration
- Kilgore -Button Butte WUI Forest Restoration
Minnesota $242,000
- Biomass Utilization–Firebreak Construction and Mech Fuels Reduction
- Agassiz Biomass Landscape Fuels Reduction
- Fuel Reduction/ Bio Mass Utilization
- Biomass Utilization–HFR and Fuel Break Creation
Montana $2,044,000
- Hollowwood Hazardous Fuels Reduction
- Kiowa Camp WUI Fuels Reduction
- McConnell/Mission Peak Connect Hazardous Fuels Reduction
- Confed. Salish & Kootenai Tribes-Biomass Utilization
- Centennial Hazardous Fuels Reduction
- Box Elder WUI Fuels Reduction
- East Glacier WUI Fuels Reduction
- Spearsiting WUI Fuels Reduction
- Kid Creek Prescribed Fire
New Mexico $1,198,000
- Mescalero West Morgan
- Ramah Cerro Alto Lobo
- Pinos Altos WUI Hazardous Fuel Reduction
- Top of the World Pie Town WUI Hazardous Fuel Reduction
- Wolf Wells WUI Hazardous Fuel Reduction
Oklahoma $1,406,000
- The Point Wildland Urban Interface Hazard Fuels Reduction Thinning Phase 2
- Hunting (WUI) Thinning Phase 2
Oregon $724,000
- Coquille Hazard Fuels Reduction
- Biomass Production
- Coquille Biomass Utilization
Utah $641,000
- Desert Reserve WUI Fuel Break
- Low Hills Sage Antimony WUI Hazardous Fuel Reduction
- Columbia WUI Hazardous Fuel Reduction
Washington $1,252,000
- Colville Biomass Utilization
- Contract Thinning with Specialized Equipment
- Yakama Biomass
Wisconsin $771,000
- Columbia WPA Brush Removal-Biomass
- Kostka Biomass Utilization
- EB Slash Recovery - Biomass project
- 3 Lakes Biomass Utilization
- Star Prairie Biomass Utilization
- Polk County Biomass Utilization
- Dane WPA Brush Removal-Biomass