Arizona State Representative Walt Blackman's (R-7) wildfire prevention bill trio has advanced out of the House Committee on Land, Agriculture & Rural Affairs and is set to go to the State Appropriations Committee.
The three bills, H2395, HB2398, and HB2400, allocate $19 million toward wildfire prevention, suppression, and contingency planning in Taylor-Snowflake, Show Low, Pinetop-Lakeside,
and Payson, high-risk areas for wildfires in eastern-central Arizona.
The bill strengthens the measures the Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management (DFFM) has in place and ensures local fire departments can adequately fight smaller fires before they spread into larger infernos.
As the press release explained, Arizona's wildfire risk has grown significantly thanks to droughts and federal land mismanagement. This issue spurred Representative Eli Crane's (R-AZ) Fix Our Forests Act, which passed the National House of Representatives in September. The act expedites environmental reviews for forest management projects and includes provisions such as promoting federal, state, tribal, and local collaboration by creating a new Fireshed Center and codifying the Shared Stewardship initiative.
Additionally, the press release chastised Governor Katie Hobbs (D-AZ) for not including adequate wildfire prevention measures, including hazardous vegetation removal and forest thinning.
As the U.S. Forest Service explained, forest thinning is the process by which forest canopy is reduced and small trees that act as ladder fuels (which allow a fire to climb further up from the ground), which, in addition to prescribed burns, reduces the risk of severe wildfires.
Rep. Blackman said, "We can't afford to sit back and let rural Arizona burn. We're proactively putting resources where they're needed most—on the front lines of wildfire prevention. These bills are about saving lives, protecting property, and ensuring that our rural communities aren't left vulnerable when the next big wildfire hits."
Moreover, Blackman reiterated the importance of serving, adding, "The people of Arizona sent us here to lead, not sit on the sidelines. This is exactly what leadership looks like—stepping up, taking action, and making sure that our rural communities have the resources they need to stay safe."