Trump tweets on California wildfires
spark confusion, debate
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[August 07, 2018]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Fire authorities
insisted on Monday that they have ample water supplies to fight
California's devastating wildfires, contrary to U.S. President Donald
Trump's tweets that unspecified water diversions to the Pacific were
making matters worse.
Officials from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection
(CalFire) and the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho,
stressed that wild-land blazes are battled primarily by crews hacking
away at dry brush with hand tools and bulldozers, not with water.
"Yes, we have plenty of water," CalFire Chief Scott McLean said by
telephone, adding that the two largest blazes in California this week -
the Carr Fire and the Mendocino Complex Fire - were each ringed by at
least three major reservoirs.
He said the tweets, after Trump on Sunday approved a federal disaster
declaration requested by Governor Jerry Brown for the fires, sparked a
barrage of media queries to CalFire.
On Sunday, Trump tweeted, "California wildfires are being magnified &
made so much worse by the bad environmental laws which aren't allowing
massive amount of readily available water to be properly utilized. It is
being diverted into the Pacific Ocean. Must also tree clear to stop fire
spreading!"
Then on Monday he tweeted, "Governor Jerry Brown must allow the Free
Flow of the vast amounts of water coming from the North and foolishly
being diverted into the Pacific Ocean. Can be used for fires, farming
and everything else. Think of California with plenty of Water - Nice!
Fast Federal govt. approvals."
The White House did not respond to requests to clarify Trump’s tweets.
Neither McLean nor Jessica Gardetto, a spokeswoman for the Idaho-based
fire agency, would address the tweets directly, but Gardetto said by
telephone, "Most wildfire suppression efforts involve firefighters and
boots on the ground."
Water, used in protecting homes and other structures and for dumping on
flames from airplane tankers and helicopters, is critical but secondary
to the larger manual efforts of clearing unburned vegetation to remove
it as potential fuel around a fire's perimeter.
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Firefighters on a structure protection team watch a plume of smoke
grow from the Ranch Fire (Mendocino Complex) in the hills north of
Upper Lake, August 1, 2018. REUTERS/Fred Greaves
Peter Gleick, one of California's leading experts on Western water
resources as president of the Oakland-based Pacific Institute, said
that Trump appeared to be seizing on the wildfires to side with
farmers on a separate debate over how to allocate California's
finite water resources among farmers, cities, fish and wildlife.
"There's nothing that California water policy has done that makes
these fires worse or more difficult to fight," Gleick said. Trump's
references to diverting water to the oceans was "completely
backwards," he said.
"The water that reaches the ocean is what's left after we've
diverted most of the water away for cities and farms, and what
little is left is barely enough for California's aquatic ecosystems
and the fisheries," he said.
The White House did not immediately respond when asked about
Gleick’s comments.
Trump's suggestion that environmental laws were somehow compounding
wildfire woes drew derision on Twitter.
Critics said his tweets ignored the greater wildfire frequency and
severity experienced in California and other Western states from
extreme drought and sustained periods of hot, dry weather, in
keeping with the forecasts of climate scientists.
Fire officials have said that 95 percent of all wildfires are caused
by humans, from camp fires left unattended to careless smoking, to
sparks from vehicles and improperly maintained power lines.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman Editing by Bill Tarrant)
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