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Forest Service Altering Fire Management Practices

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Updated: 3/08 1:33 pm
 

  After coming in $400 million over budget following last year's busy fire season, the Forest Service is altering its approach and may let more fires burn instead of attacking every one.
The move, quietly made in a letter late last month by Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell, brings the agency more in line with the National Parks Service and back to what it had done until last year.
It also answers critics who said the agency wasted money and endangered firefighters by battling fires in remote areas that posed little or no danger.
Tidwell played down the change, saying it's simply an "evolution of the science and the expertise" that has led to more emphasis on pre-fire planning and managed burns.
You may recall last summer's "Reading Fire" in the Lassen National Forest was sparked by lightning ... and the Forest Service came under fire for mismanaging it, after allowing it to burn as a controlled burn that then grew out of control and charred 28 hundred acres.
Look for local reaction tonight on Action News at 5 and 6:30.###

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