U.S. Forest Service fire chief bans residential burning
Submitted by Editor on Wed, 07/18/2012 - 9:14am
The ban is for residential burns only and does not prevent federal, state and local fire managers from conducting prescribed fire operations necessary for fuels reduction on public lands. Prescribed fire work is conducted by fully equipped professional wildland firefighting crews under favorable weather conditions.
The ban also does not prohibit small, contained campfires on private land outside the City of South Lake Tahoe, built by the property owner or with the written permission of the property owner. the Forest Services urges users to never to leave campfires unattended and to practice common sense, which is drown the fire, stir it and then feel for warm coals.
The residential burn ban will remain in effect until temperatures, winds and humidity allow for safer conditions.
The Forest Service fire chief for the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit is suspending residential burning, also known as "dooryard" burning, effective today, Wednesday, July 18, 2012, through the remainder of fire season.
The ban applies to debris burning on private, state and federal lands of El Dorado and Placer counties in the Lake Tahoe Basin, according to a news release.
Residential debris burning is already banned within the South Lake Tahoe city limits, and in both the Tahoe Douglas and North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection districts.
The ban is for residential burns only and does not prevent federal, state and local fire managers from conducting prescribed fire operations necessary for fuels reduction on public lands. Prescribed fire work is conducted by fully equipped professional wildland firefighting crews under favorable weather conditions.
The ban also does not prohibit small, contained campfires on private land outside the City of South Lake Tahoe, built by the property owner or with the written permission of the property owner. the Forest Services urges users to never to leave campfires unattended and to practice common sense, which is drown the fire, stir it and then feel for warm coals.
The residential burn ban will remain in effect until temperatures, winds and humidity allow for safer conditions.
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