Legislature(2023 - 2024)ADAMS 519

02/20/2023 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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01:33:55 PM Start
01:35:02 PM Overview: Wildland Fire Suppression Costs
02:58:48 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Overview: Wildland Fire Suppression Costs by TELECONFERENCED
Department of Natural Resources -
Helge Eng, Director and Norm McDonald, Program
Manager, Wildland Fire and Aviation Program,
Division of Forestry and Fire Protection
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                     February 20, 2023                                                                                          
                         1:33 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:33:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnson called the House Finance Committee meeting                                                                     
to order at 1:33 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Bryce Edgmon, Co-Chair                                                                                           
Representative DeLena Johnson, Co-Chair                                                                                         
Representative Julie Coulombe                                                                                                   
Representative Mike Cronk                                                                                                       
Representative Alyse Galvin                                                                                                     
Representative Sara Hannan                                                                                                      
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
Representative Dan Ortiz                                                                                                        
Representative Will Stapp                                                                                                       
Representative Frank Tomaszewski                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Neal Foster, Co-Chair                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Helge  Eng,   Director,  Division   of  Forestry   and  Fire                                                                    
Protection, Department of  Natural Resources; Norm McDonald,                                                                    
Deputy  Director,   Wildland  Fire  and   Aviation  Program,                                                                    
Division  of Forestry  and  Fire  Protection, Department  of                                                                    
Natural Resources.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
OVERVIEW: WILDLAND FIRE SUPPRESSION COSTS                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnson reviewed the meeting agenda.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
^OVERVIEW: WILDLAND FIRE SUPPRESSION COSTS                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:35:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
HELGE  ENG,   DIRECTOR,  DIVISION   OF  FORESTRY   AND  FIRE                                                                    
PROTECTION,  DEPARTMENT  OF  NATURAL  RESOURCES,  introduced                                                                    
himself and staff.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
NORM MCDONALD,  DEPUTY DIRECTOR, WILDLAND FIRE  AND AVIATION                                                                    
PROGRAM,   DIVISION  OF   FORESTRY   AND  FIRE   PROTECTION,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT  OF  NATURAL  RESOURCES,  provided  a  PowerPoint                                                                    
presentation titled  "Fire Suppression Costs:  Wildland Fire                                                                    
Suppression Budget"  (copy on file).  He planned  to discuss                                                                    
the  history   of  the   state's  responsibility   for  fire                                                                    
protection and  challenges with the changing  conditions. He                                                                    
relayed  that over  the past  two decades  there had  been a                                                                    
significant change in the fire  sizes and length of the fire                                                                    
season.  He  would  also  discuss  how  Alaska  worked  with                                                                    
federal agencies. He  noted there had been  confusion in the                                                                    
past about who  was responsible for what and  how fires were                                                                    
paid for and reimbursed.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald began with a  history of Alaska's wildland fire                                                                    
suppression on  slide 2. He  explained that before  the mid-                                                                    
1970s all of the fire protection  in Alaska had been done by                                                                    
the Bureau of Land  Management (BLM). The responsibility had                                                                    
transferred to  the state Division  of Forestry in  the mid-                                                                    
1970s to  mid-1980s through a  contract. The last  piece had                                                                    
been  completed in  1985 when  the state  had picked  up the                                                                    
McGrath area.  In 2019, the  division made a  statute change                                                                    
to reflect  its mission.  The division's mission  to protect                                                                    
the natural  resource values  at risk  had been  expanded to                                                                    
encompass  the   protection  of   Alaskan  values   at  risk                                                                    
including homes,  infrastructure, and communities.  In 2021,                                                                    
a reorganization  of the division began.  He elaborated that                                                                    
the  division  had  been  divided  into  a  Fire  Protection                                                                    
program and  a Forestry program, which  enabled the division                                                                    
to put emphasis and expertise in each of the missions.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:38:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  turned to slide  3 titled  "Alaska Interagency                                                                    
Fire Management Plan."                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnson looked  at the end of slide 2  and asked if                                                                    
the division had divided into  two branches and subsequently                                                                    
reverted back  to one branch.  She asked for details  on the                                                                    
reorganization.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  answered that the  Fire Protection  branch and                                                                    
Forestry  branch   were  included  under  the   Division  of                                                                    
Forestry and  Fire Protection. There  was a  deputy director                                                                    
of  each of  the  branches, which  enabled  the division  to                                                                    
focus on both subjects.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnson observed  that  in 2021  the division  had                                                                    
been divided into  two branches. She asked if  the change in                                                                    
2022 had been limited to a  renaming of the division and did                                                                    
not include changes to the management structure.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald answered that  the reorganization process began                                                                    
in 2021,  which would take  about three years.  He explained                                                                    
it  involved  some  changing   of  positions.  The  division                                                                    
anticipated  the  process would  be  complete  by 2023;  the                                                                    
process was currently about 80 percent complete.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz  looked at  the  timeline  on slide  2                                                                    
beginning  with 1960  when the  BLM  established a  contract                                                                    
with the  state to provide  fire protection of  state lands.                                                                    
He  assumed  the  federal  government   had  paid  for  fire                                                                    
suppression prior  to that  time. He  asked if  the contract                                                                    
included federal  funding to support fire  suppression or if                                                                    
the state  took on  funding responsibility  when it  took on                                                                    
management responsibility.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   McDonald  answered   that  Alaska   had  assumed   the                                                                    
responsibilities after statehood [in 1959]  and it had taken                                                                    
several years to make the  transition. He elaborated that in                                                                    
1960 the state paid a contract  to BLM for protection on all                                                                    
state  lands  and  through  the 1970s  it  switched  to  the                                                                    
Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Division of Forestry.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz   asked  for  verification   that  the                                                                    
federal  government  had no  role  in  supporting the  state                                                                    
financially for the state's duty to suppress fires.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald replied that he  would answer the question on a                                                                    
later slide. He  turned to slide 3 and  addressed the Alaska                                                                    
Interagency Fire  Management Plan. The plan  included state,                                                                    
federal,  and  Native   land  management  organizations.  He                                                                    
reviewed   the  fire   management  options   beginning  with                                                                    
"critical"  as the  highest level  of protection,  primarily                                                                    
including roadside  communities, villages, and  life safety.                                                                    
The  second  highest  level of  protection  was  "full"  and                                                                    
included natural resource values  and remote cabin and lodge                                                                    
sites where there  was value but not an  immediate threat to                                                                    
life  safety. The  "limited" category  was the  lowest level                                                                    
where fire  played its  natural role  in the  landscape. All                                                                    
agencies in Alaska followed  the Interagency Fire Management                                                                    
Plan for fire suppression.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:42:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald   turned  to   slide  4   titled  "Interagency                                                                    
Cooperation" and  answered Representative  Ortiz's question.                                                                    
He looked at a  map of Alaska on the left  side of the slide                                                                    
showing  protection agencies.  He  detailed  that the  north                                                                    
portion of the map highlighted  in yellow was under BLM fire                                                                    
protection. The southern portion of  the state shown in blue                                                                    
was  State  of Alaska  protection,  and  the far  south  and                                                                    
southeast  portion of  the  state was  covered  by the  U.S.                                                                    
Forest Service.  A map of Alaska  on the right of  the slide                                                                    
reflected  the different  jurisdictions  or landowners.  The                                                                    
state was  reflected in blue,  BLM was shown in  yellow, and                                                                    
Native land was indicated in  red. He explained that whether                                                                    
Native   land  fell   within  BLM   jurisdiction  or   state                                                                    
jurisdiction, the jurisdictional  agency was responsible for                                                                    
fire suppression costs.  He explained that if  the state was                                                                    
providing protection  on federal lands it  was reimbursed by                                                                    
the  federal government.  Likewise,  the federal  government                                                                    
was  reimbursed by  the state  for  providing protection  on                                                                    
state lands.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Hannan  looked  at  slide  3  and  the  fire                                                                    
management  categories.  She  looked at  Utqiagvik  (labeled                                                                    
Barrow  on  the map)  that  was  depicted as  critical.  She                                                                    
initially thought it  was listed as critical  because it was                                                                    
the North Slope; however, it  was not marked as Prudhoe Bay.                                                                    
She  asked if  there was  a fire  history in  the area.  She                                                                    
wondered  why some  areas were  designated as  critical even                                                                    
though it  seemed the protection  of human life would  be in                                                                    
other areas.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  replied that he  would follow up.  He answered                                                                    
that the fire  management options were selected  by the land                                                                    
managers. Lands  under the  state's purview  included state,                                                                    
private,   and   municipal.   The   division   worked   with                                                                    
communities to  define what protection level  they received.                                                                    
He could  not speak to  the North  Slope and the  reason for                                                                    
the critical  designation shown  on the  map. He  assumed it                                                                    
was  population  based. He  stated  it  was in  Alaska  fire                                                                    
service  protection.  Historically,  there had  not  been  a                                                                    
significant  fire  workload in  the  area,  although it  had                                                                    
changed over the past several years. He would follow up.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Hannan thought  it  seemed  the state  would                                                                    
want  to  ensure  wildfires  did   not  spread  in  critical                                                                    
infrastructure areas  in Prudhoe  Bay. She  wondered whether                                                                    
the state  could weigh in  on the fire management  option in                                                                    
the  specific region  versus the  local  land managers.  She                                                                    
reasoned  that a  wildland fire  spreading into  a petroleum                                                                    
producing area would be very bad.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald agreed. He clarified  that a coordinating group                                                                    
and a group  of land managers worked  together to prioritize                                                                    
where the  state's minimal resources would  be. He confirmed                                                                    
that under a  scenario where a wildfire  was threatening oil                                                                    
infrastructure,   it  would   receive   a   high  level   of                                                                    
protection.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:46:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  advanced to slide 5  titled "Alaska's Changing                                                                    
Wildfire Environment."  He pointed to  a chart on  the upper                                                                    
right  of  the slide  showing  the  Alaska wildfire  acreage                                                                    
seasonal total from 1950 to 2022.  The red bars on the chart                                                                    
reflected  years   where  over   3  million   acres  burned,                                                                    
including 2022.  The state was  seeing an increase  in large                                                                    
fires,   which    correlated   directly    with   increasing                                                                    
temperatures in Alaska and expanding fire seasons.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald moved  to slide 6 and continued  to speak about                                                                    
the  state's  changing  wildfire  environment.  The  map  of                                                                    
Alaska  on the  left of  the  slide depicted  the number  of                                                                    
fires in the  past couple of decades. He  detailed that just                                                                    
under 32  million acres had  burned in Alaska  [between 2001                                                                    
and 2020], which  was over 2.5 times more  than the previous                                                                    
two decades. The state was  seeing more fires, larger fires,                                                                    
and difficult to  suppress fires. He reported  that the most                                                                    
concerning of the  images on the slide was the  chart in the                                                                    
center  reflecting wildfires  in the  Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta.                                                                    
From 1950 through  the mid-2000s there had  been very little                                                                    
fire in  the region. Fires  in the region were  tundra based                                                                    
and  there had  been  a  significant spike  in  the past  10                                                                    
years.  He elaborated  that  there  were villages  requiring                                                                    
protection  in the  region and  fires in  the past  year had                                                                    
really  disrupted  the  lifestyle  of  the  communities  and                                                                    
required some  evacuations of people with  health issues. He                                                                    
noted that  the state had not  been faced with the  issue in                                                                    
the  past and  it had  become a  reality. The  graph on  the                                                                    
right showed the  lengthening fire season from  the first to                                                                    
last  large fires  in a  season. Since  the 1990s,  Alaska's                                                                    
fire season had expanded by about 45 days.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:48:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  moved to  slide  7  titled "Alaska's  Growing                                                                    
Wildland Urban  Interface." He reported  that just  under 70                                                                    
percent  of homes  in Alaska  were located  in the  wildland                                                                    
urban  interface (WUI)  areas and  85 percent  of new  homes                                                                    
were  being  built  in  the  WUI or  fire  prone  areas.  In                                                                    
addition to  the larger  and more  frequent fires,  the area                                                                    
the  Division  of Forestry  and  Fire  Protection was  being                                                                    
asked  to protect  was increasing  as well.  Slide 7  showed                                                                    
images  of  relatively  recent   fires  and  the  associated                                                                    
challenges.  In  1996,  the Millers  Reach  Fire  in  Mat-Su                                                                    
burned  350 homes  and  450 structures.  In  the last  seven                                                                    
years the  McKinley Fire and  Sockeye Fire, both  located in                                                                    
Willow, had  seen 55  homes lost (in  each fire),  damage to                                                                    
many other  structures, and caused  large-scale evacuations.                                                                    
He referenced  Representative Hannan's questions  related to                                                                    
protecting  infrastructure and  pointed to  the Aggie  Creek                                                                    
Fire at  the bottom right  of the  slide as an  example. The                                                                    
division  was  tasked  to  protect  the  pipeline  corridor,                                                                    
powerlines, cell  towers, infrastructure, mines,  and remote                                                                    
operations.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  stated  that  along with  the  cost  of  fire                                                                    
suppression, there  was the cost  of recovery (slide  9). He                                                                    
used the Sockeye and McKinley  Fires in Willow as an example                                                                    
and detailed that the Mat-Su  Borough estimated the recovery                                                                    
cost at $200 million apiece.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:51:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson  asked what  was meant  by recovery                                                                    
and what it excluded. He asked  if it excluded the man hours                                                                    
in putting out  a fire. He asked how it  was paid for (i.e.,                                                                    
claims through insurance companies).                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  replied  the   recovery  took  place  through                                                                    
multiple means.  He expounded that  some may be  through the                                                                    
Federal  Emergency  Management   Agency  (FEMA),  insurance,                                                                    
people  rebuilding  on  their  own  without  insurance,  and                                                                    
utility  companies  (for  damage  to power  lines  and  cell                                                                    
towers).  Additionally, some  of the  recovery resided  with                                                                    
the community. For example, the  Willow school had been shut                                                                    
down  for about  three weeks  resulting in  costs associated                                                                    
with  parents  having to  stay  home  from work  with  their                                                                    
children. The  borough calculated the recovery  costs, which                                                                    
included what it  took to get people back on  their feet and                                                                    
back to life  as normal. He stated that the  cost of putting                                                                    
out and securing a fire was separate.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson stated the  legislature was used to                                                                    
seeing $50 million and $100  million increments for the cost                                                                    
of  suppression alone.  He  cited the  McKinley  Fire as  an                                                                    
example  and  asked  if  it  could  mean  $200  million  for                                                                    
recovery and $100 million for suppression.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  answered that  the McKinley  Fire had  been on                                                                    
the lower  cost end  of around $10  million and  under 6,000                                                                    
acres. There had been many  firefighters on the fire and the                                                                    
fire had  been relatively short term;  therefore, the damage                                                                    
was  much larger  than the  suppression  cost. He  explained                                                                    
that expression costs were extremely  high in some instances                                                                    
because fires were  long in duration and  larger. He relayed                                                                    
that the  McKinley and Sockeye  Fires were  relatively small                                                                    
(under 6,000  acres). The damage  was high, but the  size of                                                                    
the fires was relatively small.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:53:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald turned  to slide  10  titled "Alaska  wildfire                                                                    
2022  statistics." He  relayed  that 3.1  million acres  had                                                                    
                                   th                                                                                           
burned  in 2022,  which  was the  7   largest acreage  since                                                                    
1950. He relayed  it was the highest acreage  burned in 2022                                                                    
nationwide, which  was not uncommon for  Alaska. He reported                                                                    
that  95  percent of  the  wildfires  burned in  a  six-week                                                                    
period, whereas  typically large fire seasons  occurred over                                                                    
the course  of a summer.  He elaborated that until  the rain                                                                    
arrived  in Southcentral  in mid-July,  the season  had been                                                                    
unprecedented  and  one  of the  busiest  the  division  had                                                                    
experienced. Slide  11 showed that 270  fires (approximately                                                                    
half of the fires) were human  caused and 277 were caused by                                                                    
lightning. He noted there were  also fires resulting from an                                                                    
undetermined  cause.  He  explained  that  the  normal  fire                                                                    
season saw  lightning, dry  weather, and  winds, but  it was                                                                    
typically in a  smaller geographic area. In  2022, there had                                                                    
been fires  farther west on  the Aleutian Islands  than ever                                                                    
before and all the way to the Canadian border.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:55:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  turned to slide  12 and discussed  the unusual                                                                    
start to  the 2022 wildfire  season. He explained  there had                                                                    
been  a relatively  high snow  pack, which  usually meant  a                                                                    
later start  to the fire  season, but it had  melted quickly                                                                    
and April  through June  were the  driest months  on record.                                                                    
The chart on the top  right showed the lack of precipitation                                                                    
followed by record  days of lightning during  the first week                                                                    
in June. He  reported there had been about 100  new fires in                                                                    
two days across the state.  The division had prioritized the                                                                    
values and where it put its resources.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  moved to slide  13 titled "Multiple  Fires and                                                                    
Complexes  within DNR  Jurisdiction." The  list on  the left                                                                    
showed a list  of 2022 fire complexes, which  were groups of                                                                    
fires managed by a single  management team. For example, the                                                                    
Lime Complex was in Southwest  Alaska on 22 million acres of                                                                    
land with 18  fires, all managed under one  group. The slide                                                                    
included  a partial  map  of Alaska  and  the blue  sections                                                                    
reflected state  jurisdiction. The majority of  the fires in                                                                    
2022 were  under state jurisdiction,  which resulted  in the                                                                    
state's  most expensive  fire season.  He  noted there  were                                                                    
subsequent slides  explaining it  was unusual for  the state                                                                    
to have so much of the burden of the cost on one agency.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:58:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald advanced  to slide  14 showing  increased fire                                                                    
management  costs  to  the state.  The  2022  calendar  year                                                                    
estimated  fire  suppression  costs were  $120  million.  He                                                                    
noted that  the final cost  would take another 12  months of                                                                    
auditing and  recalculating. The slide showed  how the funds                                                                    
were paid  out via  emergency declarations submitted  to the                                                                    
governor's  office  and  funded   by  the  legislature.  The                                                                    
state's average fire season was  about $70 million per year.                                                                    
He explained that the costs  were driven by the importing of                                                                    
Lower  48 resources.  In  2022, the  state  brought up  over                                                                    
3,000  firefighters  to assist  and  over  100 aircraft.  He                                                                    
elaborated  that  when  the  division  ran  out  of  Alaskan                                                                    
vendors it went  to the Lower 48 for the  aircraft. In 2022,                                                                    
there had  been 27 incident  management teams to  manage the                                                                    
fires.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Edgmon asked  if the  pattern was  typically fires                                                                    
happened earlier  in the season  in Alaska and later  in the                                                                    
Lower  48, which  allowed for  a swapping  of resources.  He                                                                    
asked specifically  about tundra fires. He  underscored that                                                                    
tundra fires  were very  scary and had  not occurred  in the                                                                    
past. He  asked about  the interfacing  between firefighters                                                                    
in the Lower 48 and in Alaska.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald agreed  that fires  near Dillingham  were rare                                                                    
and had  not happened  much in  recent history.  He detailed                                                                    
that having  fires in the  region was new,  challenging, and                                                                    
required  logistics   and  aircraft.  He  stated   that  the                                                                    
situation had  spread the division  thin in 2022  because it                                                                    
had  been  protecting  values  in  the  Dillingham  area  in                                                                    
addition  to much  of the  highway corridor  simultaneously.                                                                    
He  did  not  include  a  slide but  could  follow  up  with                                                                    
additional information. He stated  that the Alaska and Lower                                                                    
48 fires  did not  usually overlap.  He elaborated  that the                                                                    
Alaska  season  started  earlier   in  April  through  July,                                                                    
whereas  the Lower  48 season  typically  began in  mid-July                                                                    
into August.  Although there was some  overlap, firefighters                                                                    
from the Lower  48 were able to help support  Alaska when it                                                                    
needed  assistance  and  in return,  Alaska  sent  resources                                                                    
south  as the  fire season  picked up  in the  Lower 48.  In                                                                    
2015, 2019,  and 2022  the state  brought in  more resources                                                                    
than it had  sent out, whereas in 2020 and  2021 it sent out                                                                    
a significant  number of firefighters  to support  the Lower                                                                    
48. His concern was  that when overlapping seasons occurred,                                                                    
the  state did  not  receive the  resources  when it  needed                                                                    
them.  He noted  the Lower  48 was  facing the  same reality                                                                    
where fire seasons were expanding  and beginning in mid-June                                                                    
instead of  mid-July. He relayed  there was potential  for a                                                                    
lack in resources.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:01:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Cronk asked  for the  number of  state-based                                                                    
fire crews in Alaska.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  answered there  were  three  State of  Alaska                                                                    
crews,  and the  division  was  currently having  challenges                                                                    
filling  the  positions.   Additionally,  there  were  three                                                                    
contract  crews in  Alaska through  Native corporations  and                                                                    
EFFs [emergency  firefighters] that were  typically village-                                                                    
based in rural areas. He  noted the department was currently                                                                    
trying to rebuild  the EFF crews. He detailed that  10 to 12                                                                    
years earlier  there had  been around 56  to 60  crews based                                                                    
out  of  rural Alaska  that  the  state  would call  up.  He                                                                    
relayed  that  the  division  had  more  training  available                                                                    
currently than in the past;  however, he believed the number                                                                    
of crews [in rural Alaska] was  down to about six. The state                                                                    
was well  below its  normal crew capacity  for a  variety of                                                                    
reasons. He  expounded that the  state was trying  to remedy                                                                    
the  situation  through  training,  fuels  work,  and  other                                                                    
things made available  to the department in  2022. He stated                                                                    
the situation was a challenge  and the department was trying                                                                    
to turn it around.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Cronk  asked  if   there  was  a  number  or                                                                    
percentage  of firefighting  dollars  that  went to  outside                                                                    
crews and businesses.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald replied  there was a slide  reflecting the cost                                                                    
difference  between  the  Alaska  fire  crew  and  Lower  48                                                                    
[crew]. Another slide reflected  the number of outside crews                                                                    
the state had  brought in. He offered to follow  up with the                                                                    
specific numbers.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Cronk  stated that  for several years  in the                                                                    
past  there had  been  a  fire academy  located  in Tok.  He                                                                    
remarked that it had been  so good that former Governor Sean                                                                    
Parnell had  requested a ten-year extension  of the academy.                                                                    
He asked why the academy had been stopped.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald   replied  that   the  specific   academy  was                                                                    
outstanding  and the  model had  been used  for the  McGrath                                                                    
area  as well.  He stated  the model  was being  used again.                                                                    
Unfortunately, there  had been budget  cuts in 2015  and the                                                                    
Tok academy  had been cut.  He elaborated that  with support                                                                    
from  Representative Cronk  and  the governor  in 2022,  the                                                                    
funding  had  been  made  available  and  the  division  was                                                                    
bringing  the academies  back. The  division would  have six                                                                    
academies  in 2023  including  some  virtual academies.  The                                                                    
department  was working  to  rebuild  the state's  homegrown                                                                    
fire  resources and  the academies  were a  big part  of the                                                                    
equation.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative Cronk  asked how EFF pay  was established. He                                                                    
had been  on an EFF  crew in the 1990s  and he did  not know                                                                    
what  he had  been paid  per  hour. He  stated that  village                                                                    
crews  were  critical  to  fighting   fires  in  Alaska.  He                                                                    
considered whether  the crews  were paid  at a  federal rate                                                                    
and asked how to able to get the people working again.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald did not have the  entry rate for an entry level                                                                    
EFF  position. He  relayed that  the state  modeled its  EFF                                                                    
(call when needed) crews after  the federal rates. He stated                                                                    
that every year there was a  small wage increase, but he did                                                                    
not believe it had kept up  with some of the other available                                                                    
opportunities,  which  was  part   of  the  reason  for  the                                                                    
shortage  in crews.  He added  that  back in  the 1990s  the                                                                    
positions were paid relatively well  compared to some of the                                                                    
industry, but the wages had not been keeping up.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:05:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson asked how  long a state firefighter                                                                    
could  expect to  work in  a year.  He asked  if it  was six                                                                    
months or longer.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   McDonald  responded   that  most   permanent  seasonal                                                                    
positions  were about  six months.  The  positions could  be                                                                    
extended up to  eight months when they went to  the Lower 48                                                                    
for an extended season. He  relayed that with an emphasis on                                                                    
fuels work, sometimes the positions  were extended out to 10                                                                    
months. The  six months included  training time in  order to                                                                    
be prepared for the fire season.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson  asked how  the dollars  flowed. He                                                                    
stated  the legislature  typically  saw the  funding of  the                                                                    
exercises in  late winter  early spring  after the  fact. He                                                                    
asked if  the division received  the funding in  the summer.                                                                    
If not, he wondered how the workers were being paid.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  responded  that  a  subsequent  slide  helped                                                                    
answer   the   question.   The  funding   received   through                                                                    
declarations  were   primarily  used  to  pay   vendors  for                                                                    
aircraft, dozers,  boats, and other  equipment called  on at                                                                    
the  time of  an emergency.  The funding  also included  the                                                                    
importing of resources from the Lower 48.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:07:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  spoke to slide  15 showing an  illustration of                                                                    
the  2022  fire  season  financial   timeline.  One  of  the                                                                    
challenges  was  that the  fire  season  crossed two  fiscal                                                                    
years.  He highlighted  that the  months represented  in red                                                                    
reflected  FY 22.  He detailed  there had  been declarations                                                                    
during that  timeframe as well.  He explained that  the $120                                                                    
million for the  2022 fire season included  two fiscal years                                                                    
(FY 22 and  FY 23). The slide illustrated the  timing of the                                                                    
declarations and  what they covered.  He clarified  that the                                                                    
last declaration  showed funding  of $8 million  in February                                                                    
2023 that would  help cover for some of  the unaccounted for                                                                    
expenses in  fire season  2022 and set  the division  up for                                                                    
the start of fire season 2023.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald turned to slide  16 and explained that the fire                                                                    
program  had two  primary budget  components including  fire                                                                    
suppression  preparedness  and  fire  suppression  activity.                                                                    
Fire  suppression  preparedness   included  base  wages  and                                                                    
covered the  fixed cost of doing  business. Fire suppression                                                                    
activity  funds went  towards fighting  fires and  were used                                                                    
when  declarations  were  issued. The  suppression  activity                                                                    
funds  covered outside  crews working  in Alaska,  aircraft,                                                                    
emergency equipment  (i.e., dozers, excavators,  boats), and                                                                    
emergency fire travel around the state.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald turned  to  slide 17  titled  "Costs of  Using                                                                    
Lower-48  Resources." He  relayed that  an in-state  Alaskan                                                                    
crew was  about $6,500  per day  versus an  imported out-of-                                                                    
state crew costing  about $13,500 per day. The  graph on the                                                                    
right of the  slide illustrated the number  of resources the                                                                    
state brought in  from the Lower 48 in 2022.  In 2022, about                                                                    
4,200  personnel had  been used  on Alaskan  fires and  over                                                                    
3,000 of the total came from out-of-state.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:10:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  discussed  how fire  suppression  costs  were                                                                    
accrued,  used, and  spent on  slide  18. He  used the  2022                                                                    
Clear  Fire as  an example.  The fire  had started  in early                                                                    
June  with   a  lightning  strike  and   had  received  full                                                                    
protection. The division  did not have all  of the resources                                                                    
available to  contain the fire  on a smaller acreage  and it                                                                    
had  become a  larger complex  fire. The  division had  been                                                                    
tasked  with protecting  some of  the values  in the  region                                                                    
including the City of Clear  and its four rural subdivisions                                                                    
with about  100 residences. The  city was previously  an Air                                                                    
Force  base  and  was  currently a  Space  Force  base  with                                                                    
infrastructure  of  about  $5   billion  along  the  highway                                                                    
corridor. He noted  the highway corridor had  been shut down                                                                    
in  previous fire  seasons and  it was  critical to  keep it                                                                    
open  as the  lifeline between  Southcentral, the  Interior,                                                                    
and up  the haul road to  the North Slope. The  division had                                                                    
used  several management  teams and  hundreds of  people had                                                                    
been rotated  through the  fire. He pointed  out it  was the                                                                    
one  fire  in  2022   that  qualified  for  Fire  Management                                                                    
Assistance Grant  (FMAG) funding through FEMA.  The division                                                                    
worked with  FEMA to  get reimbursed for  75 percent  of the                                                                    
costs  and anticipated  bringing back  $20 million  from the                                                                    
incident.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  moved to  slide 19 and  showed two  pie charts                                                                    
reflecting fire  cost categories.  The Clear Fire  cost just                                                                    
under  $27   million  and  the  expenditure   breakdown  was                                                                    
illustrated  in a  pie chart  on the  left of  the slide.  A                                                                    
large  portion  of the  cost  was  attributed to  the  water                                                                    
scooping  and  retardant  dropping  aircraft  including  the                                                                    
flight time  to bring  the aircraft  to Alaska  when needed.                                                                    
Line equipment  included boats, dozers, and  excavators used                                                                    
to build the fire line.  The crew component included the 20-                                                                    
person fire  crews and just under  half of the cost  went to                                                                    
supporting  crew  members   with  food,  medical  attention,                                                                    
equipment needed,  and a place  to sleep. The right  side of                                                                    
the slide showed  the 2022 Middle Tanana  Complex, which had                                                                    
been  a  remote  fire  where  the  division  provided  point                                                                    
protection of  the Pogo  Mine and cabins  along some  of the                                                                    
river  corridors.  The  fire  had   been  a  bit  higher  on                                                                    
logistics and aircraft support. He  stated that at the time,                                                                    
there had been fewer  firefighters available; therefore, the                                                                    
strategy had  been limited to  protecting a few of  the most                                                                    
critical items. He  relayed that the pie  charts reflected a                                                                    
common breakdown of Alaska fire costs.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:14:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson looked  at slide  19 and  asked if                                                                    
the funding reflected base dollars or declaration dollars.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  answered that because  the costs went  to fire                                                                    
suppression, they came out of  the suppression component. He                                                                    
explained  that  if there  were  insufficient  funds in  the                                                                    
suppression   component,  a   declaration  was   issued.  He                                                                    
detailed that  the fire suppression account  had started off                                                                    
with $13.6 million on July 1,  2022. The funds had been used                                                                    
within  three  weeks  and the  first  declaration  had  been                                                                    
issued  in  July to  cover  anticipated  costs for  multiple                                                                    
fires.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson referenced  the $13.6  million and                                                                    
asked how  the department  received additional  funding when                                                                    
the legislature was not in session.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  replied  that an  emergency  declaration  was                                                                    
issued  through   the  governor's  office  as   part  of  an                                                                    
emergency  response.  He believed  it  was  similar to  what                                                                    
would  occur  in  the  event  of  another  type  of  natural                                                                    
disaster.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Josephson  thought   it   sounded  like   a                                                                    
statutory delegation of appropriation power.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Coulombe looked  at slide  18 and  asked for                                                                    
the percentage  of FEMA reimbursement  and how long  it took                                                                    
to get reimbursed.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald answered  that it took about one  week to apply                                                                    
for  the federal  funding and  to learn  whether or  not the                                                                    
application  was  successful.  The division  worked  closely                                                                    
with regional  FEMA representation and funding  was based on                                                                    
the  number  of threatened  values  within  a vicinity.  The                                                                    
Clear Fire  had qualified  for the  funding. The  state paid                                                                    
all  of the  suppression  fees upfront  and was  reimbursed.                                                                    
Typically, the state was reimbursed  about 75 percent of the                                                                    
cost. He characterized it as  a bit of an accounting problem                                                                    
because the state started  receiving the reimbursement after                                                                    
a year or two,  but it took up to five  years to receive the                                                                    
full reimbursement.  He noted  it varied  from fire  to fire                                                                    
and year to year.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Coulombe asked  where the reimbursement funds                                                                    
went when they were received by the state.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  answered that  the  funds  went back  to  the                                                                    
general fund.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:17:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  turned to slide  20 titled "Federal  vs. State                                                                    
Fiscal  Responsibility." The  pie chart  on the  left showed                                                                    
the five-year  average fiscal  responsibility and  the chart                                                                    
on   the   left  showed   the   2022   fire  season   fiscal                                                                    
responsibility.  He noted  it was  based on  where the  fire                                                                    
started  and where  suppression  was needed.  He noted  that                                                                    
2022 had  been an extremely  rare year in many  senses, with                                                                    
the fiscal responsibility being at  the top of the list [the                                                                    
pie chart showed the state  as responsible for 92 percent of                                                                    
the 2022 fire costs].                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnson looked  at the right chart and  asked if it                                                                    
was just by happenstance.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald answered  that it  was a  result of  where the                                                                    
lightning had  struck, whether the  location was in  full or                                                                    
critical  protection areas,  and where  the values  were. He                                                                    
stated that  a significant  portion of the  fires suppressed                                                                    
the previous year  were in state protection.  There had been                                                                    
a  lot of  fires in  federal protection  on state  land. The                                                                    
division  worked closely  with  the Alaska  Fire Service  to                                                                    
make  fiscally   responsible  decisions.  The   Alaska  Fire                                                                    
Service  provided  the  protection   and  the  division  had                                                                    
representatives  working  with  the agency  on  tactics  and                                                                    
actions being  taken. The Alaska  Fire Service did  the same                                                                    
for the state when there were fires on federal land.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Edgmon  stated that  the Dillingham  area basically                                                                    
had two summers in 2022. The  early summer was very hot, and                                                                    
the  second part  was excessively  rainy.  He remarked  that                                                                    
November of 2021  had been the coldest in  80 years followed                                                                    
by  a tremendously  stormy December.  He stated  that things                                                                    
were changing, and  he was hoping to ask more  about slide 3                                                                    
[showing the Alaska Interagency Fire Management Plan].                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  agreed  that things  were  changing.  He  had                                                                    
witnessed  the   change  over  the  course   of  his  career                                                                    
beginning  in 1989  on a  fire crew.  He had  seen fires  in                                                                    
places  he   never  thought  would  occur.   He  highlighted                                                                    
examples  including a  900-acre fire  on Adak  and lightning                                                                    
fires near Dillingham  that had grown more  than ever before                                                                    
in  2022. He  relayed  that there  was interesting  research                                                                    
being done by  the University of Alaska  Fairbanks about how                                                                    
rapidly  things  were  changing  and  what  the  future  was                                                                    
looking like in terms of fires.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Hannan  thought back  to 2019 when  there had                                                                    
been never ending  fires. She understood the  fires had been                                                                    
largely on federal land, but  the state had provided much of                                                                    
the response.  She understood  the accounting  nightmare and                                                                    
the  multiple  years  it  took [for  the  state  to  receive                                                                    
federal  reimbursement].  She  asked  if  there  were  legal                                                                    
fights or  accounting fights between  the state  and federal                                                                    
government.   She  highlighted   the  rhetoric   around  the                                                                    
building using  the term statehood  defense. She  provided a                                                                    
scenario where  the state  prevailed on  a portion  of water                                                                    
being state  jurisdiction because  it was navigable  yet the                                                                    
surrounding  land remained  federal.  She  wondered what  it                                                                    
meant  for the  state's response  and ability  to cover  the                                                                    
cost. She stated  that on the fire line, no  one was worried                                                                    
about land  jurisdiction at the  time of fighting  the fire.                                                                    
She  elaborated that  the state  and BLM  had worked  it out                                                                    
through decades  of joint response  and let  the accountants                                                                    
determine who  was responsible for  what cost.  She wondered                                                                    
if they were starting to  have lawyers weighing in where the                                                                    
state did  not want  to act on  something it  deemed federal                                                                    
responsibility.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:22:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald replied  that he had the  opportunity to travel                                                                    
around  the  country  for  fires and  was  on  the  incident                                                                    
management team  that traveled  wherever fires  were located                                                                    
in  Alaska and  the  Lower  48. He  had  seen some  terrible                                                                    
fights during a fire about  who was responsible for what. He                                                                    
stated they  were lucky in Alaska  to have a good  fire plan                                                                    
and cooperative agreement  that took a lot of  the fight out                                                                    
of   it.  The   state  had   not  had   to  use   attorneys.                                                                    
Additionally,  the state  had accountants  who reviewed  the                                                                    
[fire cost]  information and there was  good record keeping;                                                                    
therefore, Alaska did not have  the same challenges as other                                                                    
states.  He highlighted  that  the fire  plan  had been  put                                                                    
together  in the  1980s and  1990s and  the state  needed to                                                                    
make sure it  was updated. There were areas  where the state                                                                    
was protecting  federal assets  next to  state land  and the                                                                    
division was working  with BLM and other  agencies to ensure                                                                    
the state  was not being asked  to do something that  it was                                                                    
not  asking the  federal  government to  do. He  underscored                                                                    
that the  state's relationship with its  federal cooperators                                                                    
was  very strong.  The state  and federal  government shared                                                                    
resources  and figured  their problems  out with  some phone                                                                    
calls, which was not the case everywhere.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Stapp   stated  there  was   a  supplemental                                                                    
appropriation  for  an  additional   $50  million  for  fire                                                                    
services. He observed an additional  $6.8 million was needed                                                                    
on  top  of  the  amount based  on  the  governor's  amended                                                                    
budget. He  believed it  meant the  $50 million  had already                                                                    
been spent  and more  funding was needed.  He read  that the                                                                    
supplemental  increment was  supposed to  cover the  state's                                                                    
fire priority needs  until June 2023. He  remarked there had                                                                    
been numerous  serious fires  during the  year. He  asked if                                                                    
the additional $6.8 million would  be adequate to cover what                                                                    
would likely be a higher expense.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  replied  that  the number  was  based  on  an                                                                    
average year. He  explained that if the year  was average or                                                                    
below  average, the  cost  would be  $6.8  million or  less.                                                                    
However, if  the fire season  was similar to 2015,  2019, or                                                                    
2022, the funding  would not be sufficient  and the division                                                                    
would have to request a  declaration to cover the additional                                                                    
expenses. The division would start  to gain an understanding                                                                    
of what type  of fire season it would be  beginning in March                                                                    
or April.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:26:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Stapp asked  how far $6 million  went in fire                                                                    
suppression. For example, he asked  if it covered three fire                                                                    
days depending on the fire.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald responded  that he did not have  the daily burn                                                                    
rate for 2022.  He estimated that $6  million likely covered                                                                    
about three  days of suppression  during a peak  season like                                                                    
2022 with  six to eight  teams out managing large  fires. He                                                                    
noted that the issue was not a concern on an average year.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Cronk stated that  an ounce of prevention was                                                                    
a pound  of cure. He  highlighted that the  conversation had                                                                    
been  limited   to  fighting  fires  and   had  not  covered                                                                    
preventing fires. He  expected a lot out of  the Division of                                                                    
Forestry and  Fire Protection.  He wanted  to ensure  all of                                                                    
the   state's  communities   were   somewhat  protected   by                                                                    
prevention. He  highlighted prevention  methods such  as the                                                                    
mechanical  removal of  hazardous materials  and opening  up                                                                    
sales for  firewood for  timber harvest.  He shared  that in                                                                    
past conversations  with Native  elders he had  learned that                                                                    
Natives would do  controlled burns. He stated  it had helped                                                                    
protect  from  fires and  had  created  habitat for  various                                                                    
animals. He  had never heard  about controlled burns  in the                                                                    
current  day.   He  would  rather   spend  $30   million  on                                                                    
prevention than  $130 million on  suppression. He  hoped the                                                                    
tables could be  turned over the next several  years to lean                                                                    
towards prevention. He understood the  state had to be ready                                                                    
[for  fire  suppression]. He  wanted  to  ensure there  were                                                                    
plans in  place for  every community  in Alaska.  He thought                                                                    
the  road system  was a  little easier.  He asked  about the                                                                    
expense  of  removing an  acre  of  hazardous material  with                                                                    
equipment rather than by hand.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   McDonald  replied   that  he   viewed  prevention   as                                                                    
preventing  human  caused  fires.  He  reported  that  human                                                                    
caused  fires   in  Alaska's   communities  were   the  most                                                                    
expensive. He  elaborated that  reducing human  caused fires                                                                    
could be  done through education, enforcement,  and changing                                                                    
some of the regulations. He  stated it was an important part                                                                    
of  the fire  program  and was  something  the division  was                                                                    
investing  in  as  much  as  possible.  The  other  part  of                                                                    
prevention was  the fuels component.  The division  had been                                                                    
doing fuels reduction  projects since the 1990s,  but not at                                                                    
a fast pace.  The work had been federally funded  with a WUI                                                                    
grant and the  projects had been very small.  He shared that                                                                    
three years  ago the  division had  received $17  million in                                                                    
CIP   [capital  improvement   projects]   funds  for   fuels                                                                    
reduction. Additionally, the state  was just starting to see                                                                    
federal infrastructure funding coming  into Alaska for fuels                                                                    
work.  The division  had fuels  projects in  every community                                                                    
currently that were  underway or being planned  for the near                                                                    
future.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald referred  to  Representative Cronk's  question                                                                    
about  the cost  of fuel  removal and  offered to  follow up                                                                    
with  a briefing  paper containing  some examples  about the                                                                    
cost. The  division had a  current project in  Mat-Su called                                                                    
the Sunset, which was a  seven-mile fuels break. The project                                                                    
had started in  November and would be complete  at the start                                                                    
of the  coming fire season. He  added that the work  was all                                                                    
mechanized with  a small amount  of hand cleanup.  He stated                                                                    
there were  other places that  were more sensitive    around                                                                    
schools, infrastructure, or  homes   that were  done by hand                                                                    
because they  were not ideal  locations for  excavator work.                                                                    
He  confirmed  that  fuel  removal by  hand  was  much  more                                                                    
expensive per acre.  There was a place for  both methods and                                                                    
the division looked for the best tool for the job.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald shared that the  division had numerous projects                                                                    
that were  just starting to  come to  fruition and it  had a                                                                    
good  five-year plan  to continue  the work.  Work had  been                                                                    
started in roadside and rural communities.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:32:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Galvin  addressed recruitment  and retention.                                                                    
The  legislature  was hearing  about  the  topic with  every                                                                    
agency doing as  much as possible because they  did not have                                                                    
enough employees.  She asked  if the  fire crews  were large                                                                    
enough for the  initial response. She wondered  if there was                                                                    
any sense the division would like  the ability to get to the                                                                    
fires  on  the  front  end  to  put  them  out  faster.  She                                                                    
understood sometimes there were  some competing efforts with                                                                    
the Lower 48 for resources.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald replied that recruitment  and retention was the                                                                    
division's  top challenge  at present.  He  stated that  the                                                                    
issue was very difficult  currently. He elaborated that fire                                                                    
management was a substantial  challenge that required people                                                                    
with experience  who understood the conditions  and fuels in                                                                    
Alaska  to  make sound  decisions.  Keeping  people at  that                                                                    
level  had  been  challenging. The  division  currently  had                                                                    
three agency crews  and it would really struggle  to get one                                                                    
full crew and  potentially two half crews.  He reiterated it                                                                    
was the division's  number one challenge and  it was looking                                                                    
at ways to address the issue.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Galvin  asked if in light  of recruitment and                                                                    
retention  challenges,   the  division   may  have   a  more                                                                    
difficult  time reaching  the  end goal  if  there were  not                                                                    
enough [workers] there.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  answered  it  was  a  problem.  The  way  the                                                                    
division would work  around the situation would  be to bring                                                                    
in fire crews  from out of state. He understood  it was more                                                                    
expensive and there was a desire  to keep jobs local, but it                                                                    
was   necessary  to   be   prepared   to  protect   Alaska's                                                                    
communities.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnson asked  about the idea that  the Alaska Long                                                                    
Trail  could be  a potential  fire break.  She asked  if the                                                                    
topic had  been discussed within  the division or if  it was                                                                    
something  someone  came  up  with  as a  way  to  sell  the                                                                    
project.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald responded that had not heard the idea.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:35:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Stapp  stated  that there  was  much  recent                                                                    
discussion  on carbon  offsets and  sequestration. He  asked                                                                    
what  happened if  a fire  burned  down the  trees that  the                                                                    
state  was receiving  a carbon  offset for.  He asked  if it                                                                    
would mean the state would be obligated to pay a refund.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  answered that the  division was  just starting                                                                    
to look at  the issue and what it would  entail. He deferred                                                                    
to his colleague Mr. Eng for additional detail.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Eng  replied it  was always  a risk  in any  project. He                                                                    
agreed that some  willing buyer would have  paid millions of                                                                    
dollars to keep the trees  standing and there was a question                                                                    
about  what  would  happen  if  the  trees  burnt  down.  He                                                                    
elaborated that there was an  insurance pool built into most                                                                    
of  the registries.  He explained  that  under the  American                                                                    
Carbon Registry  every project developer paid  18 percent of                                                                    
their  proceeds  into an  insurance  pool;  therefore, if  a                                                                    
project suffered  from a fire,  it would be  covered through                                                                    
the  pool. However,  going forward  from that  point if  the                                                                    
entire forest burnt  down, there would be  no future payment                                                                    
received, but  the state would  not be obligated to  pay the                                                                    
funding back.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:37:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Edgmon  looked  at  the  Alaska  interagency  fire                                                                    
management   plan  on   slide  3.   He  observed   that  the                                                                    
predominant color on  the map was dark  green reflecting the                                                                    
"limited"  lowest  priority   category.  He  referenced  the                                                                    
uptick  in  fires  in  the  past  ten  years  in  the  Yukon                                                                    
Kuskokwim  area, including  part of  his district  and lower                                                                    
Southwest Alaska. He reasoned that  in five to ten years the                                                                    
map  could  look  different with  increases  in  the  brown,                                                                    
yellow,  and  red sections  if  the  current warming  trends                                                                    
continued.  He considered  that  if  fire suppression  costs                                                                    
were $60 million to $70  million in the supplemental budget,                                                                    
they could be significantly more expensive in the future.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald responded that  the critical category indicated                                                                    
areas with  high values.  He explained  that an  increase to                                                                    
the  critical  category  would be  driven  by  an  increased                                                                    
number  of  mines  or communities.  He  believed  state  and                                                                    
federal strategies  would change  if they  could not  stop a                                                                    
fire in the initial attack.  He explained that in 2022 there                                                                    
had  been  fires where  the  best  resources had  been  used                                                                    
(i.e., smoke  jumpers and hot shot  crews) to try to  keep a                                                                    
fire  under   10  acres;  however,  the   efforts  had  been                                                                    
unsuccessful. He  stated it  was an  indicator that  some of                                                                    
the  strategies used  in the  past may  not work.  He stated                                                                    
that the  future would be  looking at how to  protect values                                                                    
ahead of time.  He elaborated that fuels  projects and fuels                                                                    
breaks would be instrumental  in the protection of villages,                                                                    
communities, and infrastructure.  There was an understanding                                                                    
that a  fire may not be  able to be suppressed  in time, but                                                                    
there would  be a  place to  work from  in order  to protect                                                                    
values.  He believed  the critical  management option  could                                                                    
grow  as  communities expanded  along  the  road system.  He                                                                    
noted  the division  evaluated the  road system  annually to                                                                    
determine  whether an  area  was critical.  For  any of  the                                                                    
protection levels,  the division had a  nonstandard response                                                                    
process where it evaluated whether  a fire in a limited area                                                                    
could  potentially  threaten   critical  infrastructure.  He                                                                    
explained that if  the fire was deemed to  threaten areas of                                                                    
value,  the division  would take  action  regardless of  the                                                                    
predesignated options.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Edgmon  stated that it  underscored there  were not                                                                    
enough  fire  crews  in the  villages.  He  highlighted  the                                                                    
village of  New Stuyahok in  his district that had  a fairly                                                                    
new fire department building but  no fire truck. He surmised                                                                    
the  response  time would  be  swift  if  there was  a  fire                                                                    
similar  to the  2022 season  near a  village; however,  the                                                                    
inability for a community to  contribute to the response was                                                                    
an area  the legislature needed  to focus on.  He referenced                                                                    
the  fire  academies  and  the  importance  of  growing  the                                                                    
state's own  fire crews. He  thought it was likely  a fairly                                                                    
lucrative job,  but it had  to be  one of the  toughest jobs                                                                    
around. His takeaway  from the current meeting  was that the                                                                    
issue was  huge. He was a  lifelong Alaskan and had  been on                                                                    
the committee for almost a  decade and had been watching the                                                                    
increase.  He remarked  that  he knew  people  who had  lost                                                                    
their  homes  in  the  Miller's   Reach  Fire  in  1996.  He                                                                    
appreciated  the presentation  and  how  it underscored  the                                                                    
magnitude  of  the  issue  as   something  that  needed  the                                                                    
dedication of time and resources.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:43:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Hannan referenced  the Swan  Lake Fire  that                                                                    
had jumped  the Sterling Highway  and fires that  had jumped                                                                    
the Parks Highway. She asked  for the standard dimensions of                                                                    
a fire  break. She understood  that wind and  fuels building                                                                    
up the speed  of a fire played into the  issue. She reasoned                                                                    
that if the  Long Trail were to be considered  a fire brake,                                                                    
it would need to be the appropriate width.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald answered  that it varied depending  on the fuel                                                                    
types and whether  or not the terrain was sloped  or not. He                                                                    
clarified  that the  fuel breaks  did not  stop a  fire from                                                                    
spreading, but  it provided firefighters with  a location to                                                                    
have  a tactical  advantage to  work  from. Typically,  fire                                                                    
crews were  burning out  from a  preexisting line  to remove                                                                    
fuels located between the fire  and values under protection.                                                                    
The breaks  were not built with  the idea that a  fire would                                                                    
burn up  to the break  and stop.  There were places  where a                                                                    
100-foot  line  was  sufficient  and  other  locations  that                                                                    
called for a 300-foot line. He  remarked that on a bad day a                                                                    
fire would cross the Yukon River.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative    Josephson   referenced    prevention   and                                                                    
suppression and asked which was less expensive.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  replied that if  a human caused fire  could be                                                                    
prevented from starting  it was the way  to save suppression                                                                    
dollars. He  cited the Clear  Fire caused by  lightning that                                                                    
had cost  almost $27  million. He explained  that if  it had                                                                    
been a  human fire  that could  have been  prevented through                                                                    
education   or  enforcement,   it  would   save  suppression                                                                    
dollars.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson  clarified  he  was  referring  to                                                                    
mitigation  efforts taken  prior to  a fire  season such  as                                                                    
fire breaks.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald   answered  that  fire  breaks   could  reduce                                                                    
suppression costs by keeping a  fire smaller. The real value                                                                    
in the fuels  work was to protect  infrastructure and homes.                                                                    
He relayed that completing  mitigation efforts ahead of time                                                                    
was much cheaper because it  could be done through different                                                                    
means than an emergency declaration.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Josephson  believed the  state's law  did not                                                                    
treat wildland firefighters the  same as urban firefighters.                                                                    
He asked if  the law should be changed and  whether it was a                                                                    
source of upset for wildland firefighters.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:47:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald replied that wildland  fires were an issue that                                                                    
needed  to be  addressed nationally,  which included  having                                                                    
the right people  with the right skillsets  and training. He                                                                    
believed  things  were  moving  in that  direction,  but  it                                                                    
required continued improvement.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Tomaszewski  hoped that  one of  the Division                                                                    
of  Forestry's missions  was  to put  the  Division of  Fire                                                                    
Protection out  of business. He  clarified he wanted  to see                                                                    
an  aggressive stance  on getting  resources out  to private                                                                    
industry,  especially around  cities  and easily  accessible                                                                    
areas. He noted  there had been an issue in  a state park in                                                                    
Fairbanks in the  current year where the  Forest Service had                                                                    
come  in and  downed numerous  trees, cleaned  up the  park,                                                                    
piled up  the wood, and opened  it up to the  public. He had                                                                    
been one  of the individuals  who had  shown up to  fill his                                                                    
truck with firewood. He elaborated  that people had shown up                                                                    
quickly to benefit from the  wood. He reiterated his hope to                                                                    
get resources out  to private industry in  order for similar                                                                    
situations to occur in a more organized way.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Tomaszewski  looked at slide 17  and observed                                                                    
that  a  22-person Alaskan  crew  cost  $6,500 per  day.  He                                                                    
shared that  he had been  an emergency firefighter on  a 16-                                                                    
person crew  about 30 years  ago. He noted the  slide showed                                                                    
that 75 percent of the  firefighters in Alaska came from out                                                                    
of state in 2022. He  asked if the division was aggressively                                                                    
recruiting  more emergency  firefighters. He  shared it  had                                                                    
been a  great job for  him during college. He  elaborated on                                                                    
his time  fighting fires.  He asked  if the  22-person crews                                                                    
worked seven  days a week at  16 hours per day.  He wondered                                                                    
if it was the  same for crews from the Lower  48 who came to                                                                    
fight fires in Alaska.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  answered there  were firefighter  safety rules                                                                    
including the 2:1 work to  rest ratio. In most circumstances                                                                    
firefighters in Alaska did not  work past 16 hours and after                                                                    
two weeks  on, they were required  to take two days  off. He                                                                    
believed it had changed since  the 1990s. He elaborated that                                                                    
safety standards  had been set  to ensure  firefighters were                                                                    
rested prior  to being put back  on the line. He  relayed it                                                                    
had been abused  for many years and  some avoidable injuries                                                                    
had occurred  as a  result. He  stated his  understanding of                                                                    
the  question  and  replied  that  the  division  was  doing                                                                    
everything it  could to recruit within  Alaska. The division                                                                    
was   working   with   village   corporations   and   Native                                                                    
corporations,  every   community,  universities,   and  high                                                                    
schools.  Additionally, the  division had  advertisements in                                                                    
movie  theaters  and  on social  media.  He  reiterated  the                                                                    
division  was doing  everything it  could to  recruit within                                                                    
the state and  was making the training available  to as many                                                                    
people as possible. He recognized  the job was hard work and                                                                    
he  believed every  kid should  do something  like it  for a                                                                    
couple of years.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald  responded   to  Representative  Tomaszewski's                                                                    
suggestion about  making resources available to  the private                                                                    
sector. The  division tried to  make the  firewood available                                                                    
and help communities out when  there was a fuels project. He                                                                    
relayed that  wood generated from  work the division  did in                                                                    
villages typically  went to elders. He  underscored that the                                                                    
division  was  taking whatever  steps  it  could to  recruit                                                                    
Alaskans and put Alaskans to work in Alaska.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:54:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Cronk  stated there was a  harvestable timber                                                                    
abundance in the  state and a value-add  business. He stated                                                                    
that  long-term  sales  were needed  and  harvesting  mature                                                                    
timber reduced fire risk. He  elaborated that putting access                                                                    
roads  to harvestable  timber would  open  other access  for                                                                    
firewood,   subsistence,    and   recreational   activities.                                                                    
Additionally,  it  improved  habitat  for  moose  and  other                                                                    
animals. He  mentioned carbon  sequestration and  the growth                                                                    
of new trees. He stated that  the precedent was set for good                                                                    
forestry  practices  in  Alaska.   He  asked  if  the  state                                                                    
followed  federal guidelines  for  EFFs.  He remarked  there                                                                    
were numerous people  in villages who could  not fight fires                                                                    
any longer  because perhaps  they had  committed a  crime in                                                                    
the past. He stated there  were people who had made mistakes                                                                    
in the past who wanted  to work. He stated that firefighting                                                                    
was  in the  DNA  of people  living in  his  region and  was                                                                    
something to  be proud  of. He wondered  how to  prevent the                                                                    
exclusion of individuals from the much needed workforce.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  McDonald answered  there were  restrictions on  who the                                                                    
division  could   hire  related  to  criminal   history  and                                                                    
background.  He  relayed  there   were  processes  where  an                                                                    
individual  could work  with  a judge  to  work through  the                                                                    
situation and  get hired by  the division. The  division had                                                                    
worked  with individuals  to  enable them  to  work on  fire                                                                    
crews,  especially  in  rural  areas.  He  remarked  it  was                                                                    
something  the  department  could  do some  research  on  to                                                                    
determine if more could be done.  He stated it was less of a                                                                    
Division  of Forestry  and Fire  Protection  issue and  more                                                                    
about state hiring practices.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Cronk  highlighted  fire technicians  as  an                                                                    
example  and  noted there  was  a  base  in Delta  that  was                                                                    
struggling  to hire  positions.  He knew  the  wage was  not                                                                    
great. He  stated a bump  up of a  few dollars an  hour made                                                                    
all the difference in the world.  He wanted to work with the                                                                    
division to get the positions filled.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. McDonald  appreciated it  and would  take Representative                                                                    
Cronk up on the offer when the time was right.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Eng agreed with  Representative Cronk's statements about                                                                    
long-term  timber  sales,  access roads,  harvesting  mature                                                                    
timber,  and   fuels  reduction.   He  noted   the  concepts                                                                    
reflected  the  governor's  priorities as  well.  He  looked                                                                    
forward to working together on the issue.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnson thanked the presenters. She reviewed the                                                                       
schedule for the following day.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:58:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 2:58 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HFIN DNR Forestry and Fire Protection Presentation 2023 02 20.pdf HFIN 2/20/2023 1:30:00 PM