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California Rips Feds For $18 Million Wildfire Fighting Debt

LOS ANGELES (AP) - California's emergency services director fired off a sharply worded letter to the U.S. Forest Service this week that said the agency had stiffed the state $18 million for fighting wildfires on federal lands last year and raised the prospect that the state may stop protecting national forests during blazes.

"I cannot continue to support the deployment of resources to protect federal land that ultimately may bankrupt our local governments," Emergency Services Director Mark Ghilarducci said in the letter sent Monday to Forest Service Chief Thomas Tidwell.

The dispute stems from longstanding commitments that coordinate and reimburse firefighters for work on federal lands. Wildfires are fought with a combination of local, state and federal firefighters working under mutual aid agreements.

Firefighters are frequently hundreds of miles from their homes during fire season. Massive encampments that sprout up at wildfires include bean counters who tally the costs of fighting fires and figure out how to reimburse the many agencies helping out.

But Ghilarducci said the federal government was shirking its responsibilities to reimburse local governments by illogically relying on a "sudden interpretation" of a 1955 law that prevents the government from paying volunteer firefighters.

More than a third of the state firefighting force is volunteers who expect to be paid - and traditionally have been - when called into action far from home, Ghilarducci said.

It was "appalling and absurd" that the Forest Service had "blatantly ignored its financial responsibility to the men and women of California who have risked their lives fighting fires to protect federal land," Ghilarducci said.

Messages left seeking comment from the federal agency were not immediately returned.

 

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press.

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