By the Air Pollution Control District
WHAT: Prescribed pile burning of 1-10 treated acres of slash from felled dead trees and brush.
WHEN: January 24-28. Additional series of burns will occur through the spring as conditions permit. Most burning operations will begin in the morning and conclude in the afternoon. However, some burning operations may continue through the evening to allow for full consumption of flammable material.
WHERE: Burning will occur near Figueroa Mountain and various other forest locations (updated on Los Padres Twitter and Facebook accounts).
WHY: The goal of the series of pile burns is to reduce the risk of wildfire. Prescribed, or planned, fires typically burn less intensely than wildfires. Prescribed burns can help prevent the spread of wildfires and can reduce impacts to watersheds that can result in soil loss and sedimentation. The burn will be conducted when the meteorological conditions are highly favorable to direct smoke away from population centers.
WHO: This prescribed burn is planned and coordinated by the Los Padres National Forest with Santa Barbara County APCD, San Luis Obispo County APCD, San Joaquin Valley APCD, Ventura County APCD, and the California Air Resources Board to minimize impacts on air quality on surrounding communities.
This burn depends on weather and air quality conditions that are favorable for smoke dispersal. If the conditions are not as desired, the burn will be rescheduled.
To view a statewide prescribed burn map and other features, visit the Prescribed Fire Information Reporting System (PFIRS) website: https://ssl.arb.ca.gov/pfirs/firm/firm.php
LOL wow, some instant disagreement with a simple question. CHIP and VOICE?
I think you could call it raking Sac. This type of work achieves a similar result compared to a low intensity fire by clearing dead vegetation. Dead vegetation in the forest will burn sooner or later. “Raking” is one way to burn it. Another approach would be to have planned burns on a regular basis. Alternatively, another popular approach is to suppress fires at all costs until conditions are so extreme that suppression is no longer possible. This last approach is the Thomas fire. I would personally prefer a combination of the first two, but I think the Thomas fire approach to forest management remains the most popular in our community.