Monday, June 24, 2019

6/24/2019 NWCC Morning Brief

Date/Time Stamp: Sunday, Jun 23, 2019, 07:45

Northwest Activity Summary
Scattered precipitation occurred in Northern and Western Washington as well as Northwestern Oregon. No lightning recorded. Light initial attack. IMT2, NW Team 13 (Gales) has mobilized to Alaska.

Preparedness LevelsNorthwest PL
Current
3-Day
10-Day
30-Day
(1/1)
1
1
2


National PL
(6/12)


Northwest Incident Activity 
New Fires and Acres9 fires for 30
 acres
OR: 2
 fires for 0 acres
WA: 7
 fires for 30
 acres
Large Fire Summary
New large incidents: 0
Reported incidents: 0 (OR: 0 WA: 0) 
No growth on existing incidents
Northwest IMT Activity
NIMOs Committed: 0
Type 1 IMTs committed: 0
Type 2 IMTs committed: 0
National Fire Activity 
Initial attack activity: Light (87) new fires
New large incidents: 1
Large fires contained: 0
Uncontained large fires: 8

National IMT Activity
Area Command Teams: 0
NIMOs committed: 
0
Type 1 IMTs committed: 1
Type 2 IMTs committed: 3

Nationally, there are 17 large fires being managed under a strategy other than full suppression.


Northwest Current Incident Details
Incidents listed below meet large fire criteria and/or incidents with a Type 1 or 2 IMT assigned. Large incidents are defined as fires which are 100+ acres in timber or 300+ acres in grass/brush. For additional information on incidents no longer listed below please refer to the NW Large Incident Summary or Northwest Fires Utilizing Monitor, Confine, Point Zone Protection Suppression Strategies (YTD)
Incidents not Previously Reported: 0
Incidents Previously Reported: 0

Northwest Fire Weather Summary
Fire weather conditions are expected to remain near normal for late June across the geographic area. No unusual extremes of wind, temperature, or humidity are expected Sunday through Tuesday. Beginning Tuesday and Wednesday showers and thundershowers may become likely over Central and Eastern Oregon and Washington. This will bring some lightning fire starts but the cooling trend will work in the favor of initial attack. Monitor NWS fire weather planning forecasts for details.

Northwest Fire Potential Summary
Fire danger is expected to hold steady or decline for the next 10 days. The potential for large fires appears low in most areas due to lack of ignitions or very strong winds for the majority of the region. Lightning starts will become more likely on Tuesday and last through Friday as a deep upper level low pressure trough traverses the area. Even with lightning starts, the cool and moist conditions by then are expected to limit growth potential and work in the favor of initial attack next week. Occasional gusty winds in PSAs NW05 and NW10 could boost potential for human-caused fires mainly in light fuels.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.