Wildland Fire Advisory Committee. The Wildland Fire Advisory Committee (WFA Committee) was created in 2015. The WFA Committee advises the Commissioner of Public Lands (commissioner) on all matters related to wildland firefighting in the state. This includes developing strategies to enhance the safe and effective use of private and public wildland firefighting resources.
Utility Wildland Fire Prevention Advisory Committee. In 2019, the Legislature directed the 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.
In 2021, the Legislature, directed the commissioner to convene a Utility Wildland Fire Prevention Advisory Committee (advisory committee) by August 1, 2021. The duties of the advisory committee are to advise the Department of Natural Respources (DNR) on issues including:
Utilities and Transportation Commission. In May 2021, the Utilities and Transportation Commission (UTC) held a workshop on utility wildfire preparedness. The three investor-owned electric utilities (IOUs) presented their plans for the upcoming wildfire season, including plans for fire mitigation strategies and communications plans with state, federal, and local emergency response agencies, and customers.
The bill as referred to committee not considered.
Wildfire Risk Mitigation Plans. By December 31, 2022, each electric utility must provide to the UTC its wildfire risk mitigation plan. By December 31, 2023, and annually thereafter, each utility must provide to the UTC any revisions to its plans and a summary of wildland fires determined to have been caused by its equipment.
Electric utilities include IOUs and consumer-owned utilities (COUs).
Best Practices for Minimizing the Risk of Wildfires. In consultation with the advisory committee, the UTC must adopt recommended best practices for minimizing the risk of wildfires caused by electric utility equipment. The UTC must implement a strong public engagement plan in developing the best practices. The UTC must also solicit the assistance of expertise from relevant state agencies and local, federal, and tribal government agencies with wildland fire and natural resource management responsibilities.
By December 31, 2023, the UTC must adopt guidelines that describe the recommended best practices. The guidelines must address, but are not limited to:
By December 31, 2024, each electric utility must revise its wildfire mitigation planning to ensure that it incorporates the UTC's best practices guidelines, submit it to the UTC, and make its plan publicly available. The UTC must seek the expertise of the Emergency Management Division of the Military Department in the review of the plans.
For plans submitted by IOUs, the UTC must review the plan and make any recommendations for consideration by the utility. For plans submitted by COUs, the governing body of the utility must convey that it wants recommendations made by the UTC for the utility's consideration. The UTC must provide recommendations within six months of the utility's submission.
Utility Wildland Fire Prevention Advisory Committee. The advisory committee must cooperate with the UTC to integrate the committee's activities with the planning and public involvement activities for adopting best practices guidelines for minimizing the risk of wildfires caused by electric utility equipment.
By December 31, 2022, and at the beginning of each subsequent biennium, the advisory committee must submit to the Legislature:
The advisory committee chair must schedule and hold meetings on a regular basis to expeditiously accomplish these duties and make recommendations.
A representative of the UTC is added to the advisory committee.
PRO: Over the last two years, over 3 million acres of state land has burned. Wildfires are of statewide importance and we want to make sure utilities have plans that are transparent and consistent across the state. A wildfire map will be helpful. Wildfire mitigation plans should be approved to bring oversight for a consistent review to utilities. A plan should include foundational elements, such as risk modeling, situational awareness, system hardening, operation practices, and community engagement. There were concerns with the original bill and we appreciated the new draft. Utilities are having problems accessing adequate insurance, thus changes to insurance law could help. We must work together to create more resilient grid. The first line of defense is to prevent wildfires from happening in the first place.
OTHER: Utilities have learned from previous fires that we need better agency coordination and communication. Developing plans is the next logical step in reducing wildfires. Guidance on the appropriate elements to incorporate is important. The advisory committee could review plans for COUs. DNR would be the best place to review plans. To develop plans, utilities will be looking at the design of the electric system throughout the state and will need the appropriate expertise. A utility must use best practices based on their knowledge of their own system. Each utility is geographically, demographically, and operationally unique. Best practices will vary depending on utility's vegetation, topography, and weather. DNR has firefighting knowledge and utilities have equipment and system knowledge and can learn from each other. We share the end goal to make sure communities are well prepared to mitigate against wildfires.