Boise, Idaho, home to the National Interagency Fire Center, was the first stop on a of fire officials and experts to discuss the U.S. Fire Administration's on fire prevention and control.
A key concern voiced by officials during the April 18 event was the many places in the West, especially, where the built environment borders the backcountry — the so-called wildland urban interface, or WUI — where wildfires can be especially destructive.
U.S. Fire Administrator Lori Moore-Merrell said that roughly a third of Americans live in the WUI, and current strategies do not match the magnitude of the growing problem. Part of resolving it, according to the report, is enforcing building codes that protect homes and other structures from fire.
“We need the general population and certainly the builders and decision-makers … at the state and local level to understand the science and not take the cheap route, because taking the cheap route does not build resilience in our communities,” Moore-Merrell told the Mountain West ڱ Bureau. “And in those particularly fire-prone areas that we know are likely to burn again, how many times do we need to replace it with lack of or no-code buildings?”
Other key issues identified in the report – which came out of last year's – are and its impact on wildfires, addressing among firefighters and promoting
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