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THE SCHULTZ FIRE A disaster that could have been avoided

The Schultz Fire

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The Schultz Fire. A disaster that could have been avoided. Schultz Fire. Started: June 20 at approximately 11:00 at Schultz Tank and Elden Trail Cause: Investigators have determined that an abandoned campfire started the Schultz Fire. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Schultz Fire

THE SCHULTZ FIREA disaster that could have been avoided

Page 2: The Schultz Fire

Schultz Fire Started: June 20 at approximately 11:00

at Schultz Tank and Elden Trail Cause: Investigators have determined

that an abandoned campfire started the Schultz Fire.

Location: North of Flagstaff, East of the San Francisco Peaks

Size: approximately 15,075 acres

Page 3: The Schultz Fire

To date, the wildfire has cost $8,613,389 and devastated this revered landscape and its environmentally important resources.

The Forest Service is offering a reward of up to $2,500 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible.

750 homes evacuated

Page 4: The Schultz Fire

Floods During Aftermath Another resident, Maren Zobott, heard

the sound of rushing water, but no rain. "I was on the phone with my friend, and I

said, 'Oh, there's the shed floating by.'“

Page 5: The Schultz Fire

Flood Insurance at 7,000 Feet? The Warehams

bought flood insurance on July 6, as Coconino County had advised all in Timberline to do.

But the insurance has a 30-day waiting period before it becomes effective.

Page 6: The Schultz Fire

And Most Sadly Shaelyn Wilson, 12, died Tuesday

afternoon after falling into a flooded wash south of the old White Vulcan pumice mine near her neighborhood.

Page 7: The Schultz Fire

Decision Issued on Jack Smith – Schulz Forest Health Project

This planning completes the Forest Service/GFFP 10-year goals initiated in 1998 to treat forest fuels to reduce the risk of catastrophic fire and restore the natural ecosystem functions of the ponderosa pine forests within the Urban Wildland Interface surrounding Flagstaff.

Date: August 26, 2008

Page 8: The Schultz Fire

Healthy Forests This project was planned and analyzed

under authorization of the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 (HFRA), which was designed to expedite the preparation and implementation of hazardous fuels reduction projects on federal lands. 

Page 9: The Schultz Fire

Community Protection

Use of this authority helps streamline the planning process and allows implementation of the Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) for the greater Flagstaff area that was developed by numerous local and state organizations and agencies. 

Page 10: The Schultz Fire

Date: August 26, 2008 The 11,827-acre project area is north of Flagstaff, east of the San Francisco Peaks, including Schultz Pass.    

Page 11: The Schultz Fire

Western Institute for Study of the Environment Commentary

The sue-happy Center for Biological Disaster has attempted (unsuccessfully) to deflect criticism after the Schultz Fire. The community is well-aware, however, that the multi-million dollar, super-litigious, anti-forest, pro-holocaust “activist” group headquartered in Tucson has thrown legal monkey wrench after legal monkey wrench into any and all stewardship efforts in and around Flagstaff.

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“The solution to that problem is not, as Mr. Wheeler suggests, logging big trees to pay for thinning small ones. That approach puts economy before the needs of forests. It removes the big trees that are tomorrow's old growth in a forest where only 5 percent of the original old growth remains.”

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“We've been working to do so in northern Arizona for a few years now.”

Page 16: The Schultz Fire

This image of the fire was captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite on June 21. Places where MODIS detected actively burning fire are outlined in red, and smoke drifts far to the northeast over the portion of the Colorado Plateau known as the Painted Desert.http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/view.php?id=44388

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DiQtt42eQI

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