Department of Natural Resources Fire and Forest Health Programs. In 2007, the Legislature designated the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) as the state lead in developing a comprehensive forest health program for the state and created a tiered advisory and regulatory system to address forest health issues. DNR has direct charge of and supervision over all matters pertaining to the forest fire service of the state. The forest fire-related duties of DNR include enforcing all forest fire-related laws, investigating the cause of forest fires, and directing fire suppression efforts as necessary.
Electric Utilities Wildland Fire Prevention Task Force. In 2019, the Legislature passed SSB 5305, directing the Commissioner of Public Lands (commissioner) to establish an Electric Utility Wildland Fire Prevention Task Force (task force). The task force was comprised of people with expertise in wildland fire risk reduction and prevention, a representative of both small and industrial forest landowners, and entities providing retail electric service, including:
The task force advised DNR on the development of:
DNR submitted a final report to the Legislature in December 2020. The commissioner intends to maintain a utility advisory committee to advise DNR on all matters related to the prevention of electric utility caused wildfires, and other issues deemed necessary by the commissioner.
The commissioner must convene a Utility Wildland Fire Prevention Advisory Committee (advisory committee) by August 1, 2021. The duties of the advisory committee are to advise DNR on issues including:
The advisory committee membership is comprised of the same representatives that served on the task force, with the addition of four advisory committee members designated by the commissioner. The commissioner, or the commissioner's designee, must convene and chair the meetings of the advisory committee. Members of the advisory committee are immune from civil liability for official acts performed in the course of their duties specifically related to the advisory committee.
By August 1, 2021, DNR must post on its website and update quarterly as necessary:
Beginning July 1, 2022, and at the beginning of each biennium thereafter, DNR must submit a report to the Legislature describing the prior biennium proceedings of the advisory committee, including identification, if any, of recommended legislation necessary to prevent wildfires related to electric utilities.
PRO: There is a sad history of catastrophic wildfires in the state. This bill is designed to keep the momentum of the task force going by establishing an advisory committee. Utilities need to have a trusted partner in DNR, with common definitions of danger and hazard trees, procedures for timely removals, streamlined data sharing, and fair and open wildfire investigations. Task force discussions have successfully improved understanding of each other's priorities, needs, operations, and challenges. This bill will continue this collaboration and finalize approaches to danger trees, investigations, informing the public on fire safety behaviors, and near-term wildfire risks, and other issues. This bill provides a framework for DNR and utilities to come together to create solutions to the issues of wildfire prevention, risk mitigation, identified best management practices, and protection of electric utility infrastructure.
PRO: The task force did important work, we need the advisory committee to keep the momentum. We do not need the same situation that happened in California with utilities and wildfire to occur here in our state. This bill will help complete the task force work. The fiscal note outlines the costs that need funding support beyond what the agency can provide. The coordination that has occurred with this group will lead to future savings. The task force has made good progress. With proper support we can avoid problems like what happened in California. Support of this effort is a small investment today and will pay large dividends tomorrow. We need to be able to clear vegetation that endanger power lines.