St. George, UTAH—As of Thursday July 22, 2010, the majority of fire starts reported Wednesday and Thursday within the Color Country Interagency Fire Management Area, including Southern Utah and Northern Arizona, have been minimal, with the majority being single tree starts. Approximately 95 percent of fire starts reported in the last week in this region are now contained, controlled or out. On public lands administered by the BLM Arizona Strip District based in St. George, Utah: The Two Kids fire located near Oak Grove within the Arizona Strip District (currently totaling .10 acres) is being managed for multiple objectives. The Craig fire located north of Mt. Trumbull is contained and controlled. Crews are continuing to control remaining fires and patrol the region for any new starts.
As many as 30 fires have been reported since July 19, 2010. The majority of these fires were single tree fires which were contained the same day the fires were reported. Within the past week, the Paria Plateau has seen a total of 15 fires. All but one of these fires, the Coyote Buttes South fire, have been contained and controlled. Coyote Buttes South (currently .10 acres) is currently being managed for multiple objectives.
The human caused Callister Fire near Cedar Pockets which grew to a total of 15 acres has also been contained and controlled. Fire officials would like to remind the public to be mindful of the potential for wildfires when recreating on public lands over the holiday weekend and to practice fire prevention techniques including using spark arresters on machinery and putting camp fires dead out. The use of fireworks is also prohibited on federally managed lands. Fireworks are always prohibited on state owned land as well.
On private lands in Washington County: The Veyo Pool fire near the recreation site on privately owned land in Veyo, Utah was extinguished at three acres in size and as of Tuesday poses no threat to the community.
On public lands administered by the BLM Color Country District based in Cedar City, Utah: The Badger Fire located roughly 25 miles north of Cedar City, which started July 20, 2010, and grew to a total of 397 acres, is currently in the mop up stage.
All fires reported east of Milford, Utah yesterday (two on BLM lands and one on private land) have been contained and controlled and all fires reported Tuesday, near Jensen Springs and northwest of Lund, Utah on BLM administered lands were contained and controlled as of Wednesday.
The Jensen Fire, which grew to three acres, is a suppression fire and fire officials anticipate containment by Thursday evening. The Mountain Fire (which totaled .10 acres) has been contained and controlled.
The single tree fire reported southwest of Cedar City on privately owned lands, the two fires reported east of Milford, Utah, and the two fires reported north of Cedar City near Mud Springs were all contained and controlled Wednesday. The single tree Dundee Fire reported Wednesday was contained and controlled Wednesday.
On public lands administered by the Dixie National Forest: As of Wednesday, the single tree starts reported on the Escalante Ranger District of the Dixie National Forest earlier this week have been contained and controlled.
For more information concerning fire management in the Color Country Interagency Fire Management Area, go to:http://www.utahfireinfo.gov/, or call our fire information line at 435-865-4696 or contact any of the following agencies. Bureau of Land Management, Color Country District in Cedar City | 435-586-2401 | Bureau of Land Management, Arizona Strip District in St. George | 435-688-3200 | Dixie National Forest | 435-865-3700 | National Park Service (Zion National Park) | 435-772-3256 | Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands (Cedar City) | 435-586-4408 | Bureau of Indian Affairs (St. George) | 435-674-9720 |
The Color Country Interagency Fire Management Team is an organization of fire management officials in southwestern Utah and northwestern Arizona (the Arizona Strip) who promote safe and effective fire management through interagency cooperation. Since many wildfires and prescribed fires are of a multi-jurisdictional nature, interagency cooperation provides an ideal background for cohesive ecological, social, political and economical considerations for land management.
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The BLM manages more land - over 245 million acres - than any other Federal agency. This land, known as the National System of Public Lands, is primarily located in 12 Western states, including Alaska. The Bureau, with a budget of about $1 billion, also administers 700 million acres of sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation. The BLM's multiple-use mission is to sustain the health and productivity of the public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations. The Bureau accomplishes this by managing such activities as outdoor recreation, livestock grazing, mineral development, and energy production, and by conserving natural, historical, cultural, and other resources on public lands.
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