Forest service planning prescribed burns

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Staff Reports

The U.S. Forest Service has begun to conduct seasonal prescribed burns to maintain, restore or improve early successional habitat, maintain wetlands, restore unique barrens ecosystems and regenerate oak and hickory.

Prescribed burns also improve soil health by recycling nutrients and reduce fuel loads, thereby lowering the risk of catastrophic wildfire.

Approximately 5,000 to 6,000 acres are planned to receive prescribed burning in the spring of 2021 on National Forest System lands in the following counties: Jackson, Brown, Crawford, Martin, Monroe, Orange and Perry.

U.S. Forest Service fire managers utilize National Weather Service data to determine the best days to burn to achieve desired goals and maximize safety.

Many specific conditions must be met for a burn to occur, including fuel moisture, wind speed and direction and relative humidity, among other factors. Decisions are generally made the day of the burn once parameters have been measured or forecast.

Therefore, advance specific notification for a particular burn can be difficult. Forest staff notifies the public in the immediate area of the prescribed burn.

The public can check the forest’s social media accounts for announcements of burns at facebook.com/HoosierNF and twitter.com/HoosierNF. Maps and details of the burn areas will be available at inciweb.nwcg.gov.

All designated burn areas will not be accessible to the public on the day of the burn and for some time after the burn until the area is considered safe.

If any hazards are identified within the burn area, the area may be inaccessible for several days for public safety. Burning may affect access to hunting areas.

For your safety, contact the Indiana Interagency Coordination Center dispatch at 812-547-9262 if you plan to hunt or camp in or near prescribed burn areas.

A side effect of prescribed burning is smoke. Fire managers burn only under atmospheric conditions specified in a burn plan and rely on scientific data to choose days in which the impacts of smoke are minimized. Smoke plumes from a prescribed fire usually rise high into the air where the smoke dissipates. When smoke is present, motorists should reduce speeds and turn on headlights.

Burns are done under carefully planned prescriptions and protocols to mitigate the risk of an escaped fire and smoke exposure to communities. All planned activities have been carefully coordinated with county emergency management agencies.

Forest neighbors who wish to be notified of a specific date of a burn or those who wish to report medical conditions that could be affected by smoke may call 812-547-9262.

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