This page is designed to provide for timely and official fire information about wildland fires across the Pacific Northwest. The information is posted by the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center in partnership with Public Information Officers that work for federal, state and local fire agencies and is drawn from official sources within the wildland fire community.
The Pacific Northwest is experiencing numerous large uncontained fires in Oregon and Washington. The region remains at the highest Preparedness Level (Five). Our fuels (burnable vegetation) are very dry and receptive to fire. As of today, over 736,863 acres have burned in Oregon and Washington.
Total Acres 736,863
Oregon 496,208
Washington 240,655
Total Large Fires 102
Oregon 63
Washington 39
Largest Fire in OR: Chetco Bar (131,197)
Largest Fire in Washington: Silver Dollar (30,984)
Total Costs $283,280,897
Oregon $219,459,970
Washington $63,820,927
Total Firefighters and Support Personnel 9,578
Oregon 7,943
Washington 1,635
Most of Oregon is under fire restrictions so know before you go what fire restrictions are in place. Bring an alternative heat source, such as a propane camp stove as campfires are banned in most areas. Avoid parking or driving on dry grass. Properly dispose of all smoking materials. Keep a shovel and plenty of water in the event you accidentally start a fire. Call 911 if you see a fire.
Nationally, 9 out of 10 wildland fires are cause by humans. We have plenty of lightning fires on the landscape right now, so take care to avoid all unwanted, human-caused fires.
To learn more about the latest wildland fire conditions in the Pacific Northwest head on over to: http://gacc.nifc.gov/nwcc/ Video by Michael Campbell, BLM -- Graphics by Matt Christenson, BLM – Featuring Kristie Salzmann, U.S. Forest Service.
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