Firefighters slam Trump's illogical tweet about out-of-control California fires

"Mr. President, with all due respect, you are wrong."
 By 
Mark Kaufman
 on 
Firefighters slam Trump's illogical tweet about out-of-control California fires
Firefighters walk through the ashes of a wildfire-ravaged home in Malibu, California. Credit: Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP/REX/Shutterstock

As thousands of firefighters battled uncontrolled flames in both Northern and Southern California on Saturday, President Trump tweeted out an ill-informed, distorted message about the cause of these deadly autumn infernos.

But the firefighting community quickly rebutted the president's claims, wherein he blamed "gross mismanagement of the forests," while also threatening to cut federal support to fire management efforts.

As firefighters, fire researchers, and climate scientists largely agree, mismanaged forests -- which generally means wooded areas that haven't been allowed to naturally burn and reduce vulnerable vegetation -- are just one part of a complex, growing wildfire problem in the U.S. Rather, today's historic wildfire woes are a confluence of weather events, human-building, climate change, and mismanaged forests.

As the Pasadena Fire Association pointed out on Twitter, "Mr. President, with all due respect, you are wrong."

In Southern California, where the Woolsey Fire (as of Nov. 10 at 8:30 p.m.) had burned over 83,000 acres and forced Hollywood stars and wildlife alike to flee to the beaches, mismanaged forests are not to blame. The affected areas aren't overgrown pine forests, but grasslands and other coastal or near-coastal shrublands, known as chaparral.

There's nothing to log here, noted Crystal Kolden, a former wildland firefighter and associate professor in forest rangeland and fire sciences at the University of Idaho, countered on Twitter.

A continuing problem in Southern California, like in many Western areas, is that populations have expanded into dry areas that naturally burn, known as the urban-wildlife interface. Deadly fires often burn through these communities, as they've repeatedly done in California -- jumping major freeways and torching suburban homes.

This requires local and political solutions, such as intelligently reducing dry vegetation near these communities, or building fire-resistant homes, fire scientist Michael Gollner explained on Friday.

Exacerbating matters, fires everywhere are now burning more land, burning for longer, and becoming more destructive -- and climate change is a potent contributor. Simply put, hotter climes suck moisture out of the land, leaving profoundly dried out, tinder-ready grasslands and forests.

Although fire season should be winding down in California, a vast swath of the state is still experiencing record dryness -- notably in Northern California where the Camp Fire burned people to death in their vehicles.

"This is a big deal," U.S. Forest Service meteorologist Brenda Belongie, referring the record dryness, said Friday.

Wildfires are largely stoked by weather and gusty winds, but solving the growing problem doesn't have a quick forest management fix, as the president contends.

For that reason, amid new fires that have killed at least 23 people, the firefighting community has found the president's ignorant fire-messaging to be repugnant. The International Association of Firefighters, of note, offered the Commander-in-Chief some stark words:

Firefighters understand the complexity and influences of today's flames. But their mission now is to help subdue the blazes, so firefighters haven't tolerated President Trump's wrong-headed, oversimplified message.

As the International Association of Firefighters said: "To minimize the crucial, life-saving work being done and to make crass suggestions such as cutting off funding during a time of crisis shows a troubling lack of real comprehension about the disaster at hand and the dangerous job our fire fighters do."

Topics Donald Trump

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Mark Kaufman
Science Editor

Mark was the science editor at Mashable. After working as a ranger with the National Park Service, he started a reporting career after seeing the extraordinary value in educating people about the happenings on Earth, and beyond.

He's descended 2,500 feet into the ocean depths in search of the sixgill shark, ventured into the halls of top R&D laboratories, and interviewed some of the most fascinating scientists in the world.

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