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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Interior, Environment and Related Agencies, 
Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT: 

Thursday, July 14, 2005: 

Wildland Fire Management: 

Timely Identification of Long-Term Options and Funding Needs Is 
Critical: 

Statement of Robert A. Robinson, Managing Director, Natural Resources 
and Environment: 

GAO-05-923T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-05-923T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Interior, Environment and Related Agencies, Committee on 
Appropriations, House of Representatives: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Wildland fires are increasingly threatening communities and ecosystems. 
In recent years, these fires have become more intense due to excess 
vegetation that has accumulated, partly as a result of past management 
practices. Experts have said that the window of opportunity for 
effectively responding to wildland fire is rapidly closing. 

The federal government’s cost to manage wildland fires continues to 
increase. Appropriations for its wildland fire management activities 
tripled from about $1 billion in fiscal year 1999 to nearly $3 billion 
in fiscal year 2005. 

This testimony discusses the federal government’s progress over the 
past 5 years and future challenges in managing wildland fires. It is 
based primarily on GAO’s report: Wildland Fire Management: Important 
Progress Has Been Made, but Challenges Remain to Completing a Cohesive 
Strategy (GAO-05-147, Jan. 14, 2005). 

What GAO Found: 

Over the last 5 years, the Forest Service in the Department of 
Agriculture and land management agencies in the Department of the 
Interior, working with the Congress, have made important progress in 
responding to wildland fires. Most notably, the agencies have adopted 
various national strategy documents addressing the need to reduce 
wildland fire risks, established a priority to protect communities in 
the wildland-urban interface, and increased efforts and amounts of 
funding committed to addressing wildland fire problems, including 
preparedness, suppression, and fuel reduction on federal lands. In 
addition, the agencies have begun improving their data and research on 
wildland fire problems, made progress in developing long-needed fire 
management plans that identify actions for effectively addressing 
wildland fire threats at the local level, and improved federal 
interagency coordination and collaboration with nonfederal partners. 
The agencies also have strengthened overall accountability for their 
investments in wildland fire activities by establishing improved 
performance measures and a framework for monitoring results. 

Despite producing numerous planning and strategy documents, the 
agencies have yet to develop a cohesive strategy that explicitly 
identifies the long-term options and related funding needed to reduce 
the excess vegetation that fuels fires in national forests and 
rangelands. Reducing these fuels lowers risks to communities and 
ecosystems and helps contain suppression costs. As GAO noted in 1999, 
such a strategy would help the agencies and the Congress to determine 
the most effective and affordable long-term approach for addressing 
wildland fire problems. Completing this strategy will require finishing 
several efforts now under way, each with its own challenges. The 
agencies will need to finish planned improvements in a key data and 
modeling system—LANDFIRE—to more precisely identify the extent and 
location of wildland fire threats and to better target fuel reduction 
efforts. In implementing LANDFIRE, the agencies will need more 
consistent approaches to assessing wildland fire risks, more integrated 
information systems, and better understanding of the role of climate in 
wildland fire. In addition, local fire management plans will need to be 
updated with data from LANDFIRE and from emerging agency research on 
more cost-effective approaches to reducing fuels. Completing a new 
system designed to identify the most cost-effective means for 
allocating fire management budget resources—Fire Program Analysis—may 
help to better identify long-term options and related funding needs. 
Without completing these tasks, the agencies will have difficulty 
determining the extent and location of wildland fire threats, targeting 
and coordinating their efforts and resources, and resolving wildland 
fire problems in the most timely and cost-effective manner over the 
long term. 

What GAO Recommends: 

In its report, GAO recommended that the Secretaries of Agriculture and 
of the Interior develop a plan for completing a cohesive strategy that 
identifies options and funding needed to address wildland fire 
problems. The agencies agreed with GAO’s recommendation and expect to 
develop such a plan by August 2005. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-923T. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Robert A. Robinson at 
(202) 512-3841 or robinsonr@gao.gov, or Robin M. Nazzaro at (202) 512-
3841 or nazzaror@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss the status of the federal 
government's efforts to address our nation's wildland fire problems. 
Wildland fire is a natural process that plays an important role in the 
health of many fire-adapted ecosystems, but it also can cause 
catastrophic damage to communities and ecosystems. The trend of 
increasing wildland fire threats to communities and ecosystems that we 
reported on 5 years ago has continued.[Footnote 1] The average acreage 
of lands burned by wildland fires annually from 2000 through 2004 was 
about 62 percent greater than the average amount burned annually during 
the 1990s. Experts have noted that catastrophic damage from wildland 
fires probably will continue to increase until an adequate long-term 
federal response is implemented. They stated that efforts to resolve 
the growing threats of catastrophic wildland fires are in a race 
against time and the window of opportunity is rapidly closing. 

My testimony today summarizes the findings of our January 2005 report, 
which discusses the progress the federal government has made over the 
last 5 years and key challenges it faces in developing and implementing 
a long-term response to wildland fire problems.[Footnote 2] This report 
is based primarily on over 25 reviews we conducted in recent years of 
federal wildland fire management that focused largely on the activities 
of the Forest Service in the Department of Agriculture and the land 
management agencies in the Department of the Interior, which together 
manage about 95 percent of all federal lands. 

Summary: 

In the past 5 years, the federal government has made important progress 
in putting into place the basic components of a framework for managing 
and responding to the nation's wildland fire problems, including: 

* establishing a priority to protect communities near wildlands--called 
the wildland-urban interface;

* increasing the amount of effort and funds available for addressing 
fire-related concerns, such as fuel reduction on federal lands;

* improving data and research on wildland fire, local fire management 
plans, interagency coordination, and collaboration with nonfederal 
partners; and: 

* refining performance measures and results monitoring for wildland 
fire management. 

While this progress has been important, many challenges remain for 
addressing wildland fire problems in a timely and effective manner. 
Most notably, the land management agencies need to complete a cohesive 
strategy that identifies the long-term options and related funding 
needed for reducing fuels and responding to wildland fires when they 
occur. A recent Western Governors' Association report also called for 
completing such a cohesive federal strategy. The agencies and the 
Congress need such a strategy to make decisions about an effective and 
affordable long-term approach for addressing problems that have been 
decades in the making and will take decades more to resolve. However, 
completing and implementing such a strategy will require that the 
agencies complete several challenging tasks, including: 

* developing data systems needed to identify the extent, severity, and 
location of wildland fire threats to the nation's communities and 
ecosystems;

* updating local fire management plans to better specify the actions 
needed to effectively address these threats; and: 

* assessing the cost-effectiveness and affordability of options for 
reducing fuels. 

In our January 2005 report, we recommended that the Secretaries of 
Agriculture and of the Interior provide the Congress, in time for its 
consideration of the agencies' fiscal year 2006 wildland fire 
management budgets, with a joint tactical plan outlining the critical 
steps the agencies will take, together with related time frames, to 
complete a cohesive strategy that identifies long-term options and 
needed funding for reducing and maintaining fuels at acceptable levels 
and responding to the nation's wildland fire problems. The departments 
of Agriculture and the Interior have said that they will produce such a 
plan by August 2005. In these times of limited resources, we believe it 
is critical that the agencies develop and implement this plan in a 
timely fashion so that they and the Congress, especially this 
Subcommittee, have the best information available to make informed 
decisions in addressing the nation's wildland fire problems. 

Background: 

Wildland fire triggered by lightning is a normal, inevitable, and 
necessary ecological process that nature uses to periodically remove 
excess undergrowth, small trees, and vegetation to renew ecosystem 
productivity. However, various human land use and management practices, 
including several decades of fire suppression activities, have reduced 
the normal frequency of wildland fires in many forest and rangeland 
ecosystems and have resulted in abnormally dense and continuous 
accumulations of vegetation that can fuel uncharacteristically large 
and intense wildland fires. Such large intense fires increasingly 
threaten catastrophic ecosystem damage and also increasingly threaten 
human lives, health, property, and infrastructure in the wildland-urban 
interface. Federal researchers estimate that vegetative conditions that 
can fuel such fires exist on approximately 190 million acres--or more 
than 40 percent--of federal lands in the contiguous United States but 
could vary from 90 million to 200 million acres, and that these 
conditions also exist on many nonfederal lands. 

Our reviews over the last 5 years identified several weaknesses in the 
federal government's management response to wildland fire issues. These 
weaknesses included the lack of a national strategy that addressed the 
likely high costs of needed fuel reduction efforts and the need to 
prioritize these efforts. Our reviews also found shortcomings in 
federal implementation at the local level, where over half of all 
federal land management units' fire management plans did not meet 
agency requirements designed to restore fire's natural role in 
ecosystems consistent with human health and safety. These plans are 
intended to provide program direction for fuel reduction, preparedness, 
suppression, and rehabilitation actions. The agencies also lacked basic 
data, such as the amount and location of lands needing fuel reduction, 
and research on the effectiveness of different fuel reduction methods 
on which to base their fire management plans and specific project 
decisions. Furthermore, coordination among federal agencies and 
collaboration between these agencies and nonfederal entities were 
ineffective. This kind of cooperation is needed because wildland fire 
is a shared problem that transcends land ownership and administrative 
boundaries. Finally, we found that better accountability for federal 
expenditures and performance in wildland fire management was needed. 
Agencies were unable to assess the extent to which they were reducing 
wildland fire risks or to establish meaningful fuel reduction 
performance measures, as well as to determine the cost-effectiveness of 
these efforts, because they lacked both monitoring data and sufficient 
data on the location of lands at high risk of catastrophic fires to 
know the effects of their actions. As a result, their performance 
measures created incentives to reduce fuels on all acres, as opposed to 
focusing on high-risk acres. 

Because of these weaknesses, and because experts said that wildland 
fire problems could take decades to resolve, we said that a cohesive, 
long-term, federal wildland fire management strategy was 
needed.[Footnote 3] We said that this cohesive strategy needed to focus 
on identifying options for reducing fuels over the long term in order 
to decrease future wildland fire risks and related costs. We also said 
that the strategy should identify the costs associated with those 
different fuel reduction options over time, so that the Congress could 
make cost-effective, strategic funding decisions. 

Important Progress Has Been Made in Addressing Federal Wildland Fire 
Management Problems over the Last 5 Years: 

The federal government has made important progress over the last 5 
years in improving its management of wildland fire. Nationally, it has 
established strategic priorities and increased resources for 
implementing these priorities. Locally, it has enhanced data and 
research, planning, coordination, and collaboration with other parties. 
With regard to accountability, it has improved performance measures and 
established a monitoring framework. 

Progress in National Strategy: Priorities Have Been Clarified and 
Funding Has Been Increased for Identified Needs: 

Over the last 5 years, the federal government has been formulating a 
national strategy known as the National Fire Plan, composed of several 
strategic documents that set forth a priority to reduce wildland fire 
risks to communities. Similarly, the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 
2003 directs that at least 50 percent of funding for fuel reduction 
projects authorized under the act be allocated to wildland-urban 
interface areas. While we have raised concerns about the way the 
agencies have defined these areas and the specificity of their 
prioritization guidance, we believe that the act's clarification of the 
community protection priority provides a good starting point for 
identifying and prioritizing funding needs. Similarly, in contrast to 
fiscal year 1999, when we reported that the Forest Service had not 
requested increased funding to meet the growing fuel reduction needs it 
had identified, fuel reduction funding for both the Forest Service and 
Interior more than quadrupled by fiscal year 2005. The Congress, in the 
Healthy Forests Restoration Act, also authorized $760 million per year 
to be appropriated for hazardous fuels reduction activities, including 
projects for reducing fuels on up to 20 million acres of land. 
Moreover, appropriations for both agencies' overall wildland fire 
management activities, including preparedness, fuel reduction, and 
suppression, tripled from about $1 billion in fiscal year 1999 to 
nearly $3 billion in fiscal year 2005. 

Progress in Local Implementation: Data and Research, Fire Management 
Planning, and Coordination and Collaboration Have Been Strengthened: 

The agencies have strengthened local wildland fire management 
implementation by making significant improvements in federal data and 
research on wildland fire over the past 5 years, including an initial 
mapping of fuel hazards nationwide. Additionally, in 2003, the agencies 
approved funding for development of a geospatial data and modeling 
system, called LANDFIRE, to map wildland fire hazards with greater 
precision and uniformity. LANDFIRE--estimated to cost $40 million and 
scheduled for nationwide implementation in 2009--will enable 
comparisons of conditions between different field locations nationwide, 
thus permitting better identification of the nature and magnitude of 
wildland fire risks confronting different community and ecosystem 
resources, such as residential and commercial structures, species 
habitat, air and water quality, and soils. 

The agencies also have improved local fire management planning by 
adopting and executing an expedited schedule to complete plans for all 
land units that had not been in compliance with agency requirements. 
The agencies also adopted a common interagency template for preparing 
plans to ensure greater consistency in their contents. 

Coordination among federal agencies and their collaboration with 
nonfederal partners, critical to effective implementation at the local 
level, also has been improved. In 2001, as a result of congressional 
direction, the agencies jointly formulated a 10-Year Comprehensive 
Strategy with the Western Governors' Association to involve the states 
as full partners in their efforts. An implementation plan adopted by 
the agencies in 2002 details goals, time lines, and responsibilities of 
the different parties for a wide range of activities, including 
collaboration at the local level to identify fuel reduction priorities 
in different areas. Also in 2002, the agencies established an 
interagency body, the Wildland Fire Leadership Council, composed of 
senior Agriculture and Interior officials and nonfederal 
representatives, to improve coordination of their activities with each 
other and nonfederal parties. 

Progress in Accountability: Better Performance Measures and a Results 
Monitoring Framework Have Been Developed: 

Accountability for the results the federal government achieves from its 
investments in wildland fire management activities also has been 
strengthened. The agencies have adopted a performance measure that 
identifies the amount of acres moved from high-hazard to low-hazard 
fuel conditions, replacing a performance measure for fuel reductions 
that measured only the total acres of fuel reductions and created an 
incentive to treat less costly acres rather than the acres that 
presented the greatest hazards. Additionally, in 2004, to have a better 
baseline for measuring progress, the Wildland Fire Leadership Council 
approved a nationwide framework for monitoring the effects of wildland 
fire. While an implementation plan is still needed for this framework, 
it nonetheless represents a critical step toward enhancing wildland 
fire management accountability. 

Agencies Face Several Challenges to Completing a Long-Needed Cohesive 
Strategy for Reducing Fuels and Responding to Wildland Fire Problems: 

While the federal government has made important progress over the past 
5 years in addressing wildland fire, a number of challenges still must 
be met to complete development of a cohesive strategy that explicitly 
identifies available long-term options and funding needed to reduce 
fuels on the nation's forests and rangelands. Without such a strategy, 
the Congress will not have an informed understanding of when, how, and 
at what cost wildland fire problems can be brought under control. None 
of the strategic documents adopted by the agencies to date have 
identified these options and related funding needs, and the agencies 
have yet to delineate a plan or schedule for doing so. To identify 
these options and funding needs, the agencies will have to address 
several challenging tasks related to their data systems, fire 
management plans, and the assessment of the cost-effectiveness and 
affordability of different options for reducing fuels. 

Completing and Implementing the LANDFIRE System Is Essential to 
Identifying and Addressing Wildland Fire Threats: 

The agencies face several challenges to completing and implementing 
LANDFIRE, so that they can more precisely identify the extent and 
location of wildland fire threats and better target fuel reduction 
efforts. These challenges include using LANDFIRE to better reconcile 
the effects of fuel reduction activities with the agencies' other 
stewardship responsibilities for protecting ecosystem resources, such 
as air, water, soils, and species habitat, which fuel reduction efforts 
can adversely affect. The agencies also need LANDFIRE to help them 
better measure and assess their performance. For example, the data 
produced by LANDFIRE will help them devise a separate performance 
measure for maintaining conditions on low-hazard lands to ensure that 
their conditions do not deteriorate to more hazardous conditions while 
funding is being focused on lands with high-hazard conditions. 

In implementing LANDFIRE, however, the agencies will have to overcome 
the challenges presented by the current lack of a consistent approach 
to assessing the risks of wildland fires to ecosystem resources as well 
as the lack of an integrated, strategic, and unified approach to 
managing and using information systems and data, including those such 
as LANDFIRE, in wildland fire decision making. Currently, software, 
data standards, equipment, and training vary among the agencies and 
field units in ways that hamper needed sharing and consistent 
application of the data. Also, LANDFIRE data and models may need to be 
revised to take into account recent research findings that suggest part 
of the increase in wildland fire in recent years has been caused by a 
shift in climate patterns. This research also suggests that these new 
climate patterns may continue for decades, resulting in further 
increases in the amount of wildland fire. Thus, the nature, extent, and 
geographical distribution of hazards initially identified in LANDFIRE, 
as well as the costs for addressing them, may have to be reassessed. 

Fire Management Plans Will Need to Be Updated with Latest Data and 
Research on Wildland Fire: 

The agencies will need to update their local fire management plans when 
more detailed, nationally consistent LANDFIRE data become available. 
The plans also will have to be updated to incorporate recent agency 
fire research on approaches to more effectively address wildland fire 
threats. For example, a 2002 interagency analysis found that protecting 
wildland-urban interface communities more effectively--as well as more 
cost-effectively--might require locating a higher proportion of fuel 
reduction projects outside of the wildland-urban interface than 
currently envisioned, so that fires originating in the wildlands do not 
become too large to suppress by the time they arrive at the interface. 
Moreover, other agency research suggests that placing fuel reduction 
treatments in specific geometric patterns may, for the same cost, 
provide protection for up to three times as many community and 
ecosystem resources as do other approaches, such as placing fuel breaks 
around communities and ecosystems resources. Timely updating of fire 
management plans with the latest research findings on optimal design 
and location of treatments also will be critical to the effectiveness 
and cost-effectiveness of these plans. The Forest Service indicated 
that this updating could occur during annual reviews of fire management 
plans to determine whether any changes to them may be needed. 

Ongoing Efforts to Assess the Cost-Effectiveness and Affordability of 
Fuel Reduction Options Need to Be Completed: 

Completing the LANDFIRE data and modeling system and updating fire 
management plans should enable the agencies to formulate a range of 
options for reducing fuels. However, to identify optimal and affordable 
choices among these options, the agencies will have to complete certain 
cost-effectiveness analysis efforts they currently have under way. 
These efforts include an initial 2002 interagency analysis of options 
and costs for reducing fuels, congressionally-directed improvements to 
their budget allocation systems, and a new strategic analysis framework 
that considers affordability. 

The Interagency Analysis of Options and Costs: In 2002, a team of 
Forest Service and Interior experts produced an estimate of the funds 
needed to implement eight different fuel reduction options for 
protecting communities and ecosystems across the nation over the next 
century. Their analysis also considered the impacts of fuels reduction 
activities on future costs for other principal wildland fire management 
activities, such as preparedness, suppression, and rehabilitation, if 
fuels were not reduced. The team concluded that the option that would 
result in reducing the risks to communities and ecosystems across the 
nation could require an approximate tripling of current fuel reduction 
funding to about $1.4 billion for an initial period of a few years. 
These initially higher costs would decline after fuels had been reduced 
enough to use less expensive controlled burning methods in many areas 
and more fires could be suppressed at lower cost, with total wildland 
fire management costs, as well as risks, being reduced after 15 years. 
Alternatively, the team said that not making a substantial short-term 
investment using a landscape focus could increase both costs and risks 
to communities and ecosystems in the long term. More recently, however, 
Interior has said that the costs and time required to reverse current 
increasing risks may be less when other vegetation management 
activities--such as timber harvesting and habitat improvements--are 
considered that were not included in the interagency team's original 
assessment but also can influence wildland fire. 

The cost of the 2002 interagency team's option that reduced risks to 
communities and ecosystems over the long term is consistent with a June 
2002 National Association of State Foresters' projection of the funding 
needed to implement the 10-Year Comprehensive Strategy developed by the 
agencies and the Western Governors' Association the previous year. The 
state foresters projected a need for steady increases in fuel reduction 
funding up to a level of about $1.1 billion by fiscal year 2011. This 
is somewhat less than that of the interagency team's estimate, but 
still about 2-1/2 times current levels. 

The interagency team of experts who prepared the 2002 analysis of 
options and associated costs said their estimates of long-term costs 
could only be considered an approximation because the data used for 
their national-level analysis were not sufficiently detailed. They said 
a more accurate estimate of the long-term federal costs and 
consequences of different options nationwide would require applying 
this national analysis framework in smaller geographic areas using more 
detailed data, such as that produced by LANDFIRE, and then aggregating 
these smaller-scale results. 

The New Budget Allocation System: Agency officials told us that a tool 
for applying this interagency analysis at a smaller geographic scale 
for aggregation nationally may be another management system under 
development--the Fire Program Analysis system. This system, being 
developed in response to congressional committee direction to improve 
budget allocation tools, is designed to identify the most cost- 
effective allocations of annual preparedness funding for implementing 
agency field units' local fire management plans. Eventually, the Fire 
Program Analysis system, being initially implemented in 2005, will use 
LANDFIRE data and provide a smaller geographical scale for analyses of 
fuel reduction options and thus, like LANDFIRE, will be critical for 
updating fire management plans. Officials said that this preparedness 
budget allocation systemæwhen integrated with an additional component 
now being considered for allocating annual fuel reduction funding-- 
could be instrumental in identifying the most cost-effective long-term 
levels, mixes, and scheduling of these two wildland fire management 
activities. Completely developing the Fire Program Analysis system, 
including the fuel reduction funding component, is expected to cost 
about $40 million and take until at least 2007 and perhaps until 2009. 

The New Strategic Analysis Effort: In May 2004, Agriculture and 
Interior began the initial phase of a wildland fire strategic planning 
effort that also might contribute to identifying long-term options and 
needed funding for reducing fuels and responding to the nation's 
wildland fire problems. This effortæthe Quadrennial Fire and Fuels 
Reviewæis intended to result in an overall federal interagency 
strategic planning document for wildland fire management and risk 
reduction and to provide a blueprint for developing affordable and 
integrated fire preparedness, fuels reduction, and fire suppression 
programs. Because of this effort's consideration of affordability, it 
may provide a useful framework for developing a cohesive strategy that 
includes identifying long-term options and related funding needs. The 
preliminary planning, analysis, and internal review phases of this 
effort have been completed and an initial report is expected in July 
2005. 

The improvements in data, modeling, and fire behavior research that the 
agencies have under way, together with the new cost-effectiveness focus 
of the Fire Program Analysis system to support local fire management 
plans, represent important tools that the agencies can begin to use now 
to provide the Congress with initial and successively more accurate 
assessments of long-term fuel reduction options and related funding 
needs. Moreover, a more transparent process of interagency analysis in 
framing these options and their costs will permit better identification 
and resolution of differing assumptions, approaches, and values. This 
transparency provides the best assurance of accuracy and consensus 
among differing estimates, such as those of the interagency team and 
the National Association of State Foresters. 

A Recent Western Governors' Association Report Is Consistent with GAO's 
Findings and Recommendation: 

In November 2004, the Western Governors' Association issued a report 
prepared by its Forest Health Advisory Committee that assessed 
implementation of the 10-Year Comprehensive Strategy, which the 
association had jointly devised with the agencies in 2001.[Footnote 4] 
Although the association's report had a different scope than our 
review, its findings and recommendations are, nonetheless, generally 
consistent with ours about the progress made by the federal government 
and the challenges it faces over the next 5 years. In particular, it 
recommends, as we do, completion of a long-term, federal, cohesive 
strategy for reducing fuels. It also cites the need for continued 
efforts to improve, among other things, data on hazardous fuels, fire 
management plans, the Fire Program Analysis system, and cost- 
effectiveness in fuel reductions--all challenges we have emphasized 
today. 

Conclusions: 

In conclusion, Mr. Chairman, the progress made by the federal 
government over the last 5 years has provided a sound foundation for 
addressing the problems that wildland fire will increasingly present to 
communities, ecosystems, and federal budgetary resources over the next 
few years and decades. As yet, however, there is no clear single answer 
about how best to address these problems in either the short or long 
term. Instead, there are different options, each needing further 
development to understand the trade-offs among the risks and funding 
involved. The Congress needs to understand these options and trade-offs 
in order to make informed policy and appropriations decisions on this 
21st century challenge. 

This is the same message we provided in 1999 when we first called for 
development of a cohesive strategy identifying options and funding 
needs. But it has not been completed. While the agencies are now in a 
better position to do so, they must build on the progress made to date 
by completing data and modeling efforts underway, updating their fire 
management plans with the results of these data efforts and ongoing 
research, and following through on recent cost-effectiveness and 
affordability initiatives. However, time is running out. Further delay 
in completing a strategy that cohesively integrates these activities to 
identify options and related funding needs will only result in 
increased long-term risks to communities, ecosystems, and federal 
budgetary resources. 

Because there is an increasingly urgent need for a cohesive federal 
strategy that identifies long-term options and related funding needs 
for reducing fuels, we recommended that the Secretaries of Agriculture 
and of the Interior provide the Congress, in time for its consideration 
of the agencies' fiscal year 2006 wildland fire management budgets, 
with a joint tactical plan outlining the critical steps the agencies 
will take, together with related time frames, to complete such a 
cohesive strategy. 

In an April 2005 letter, Agriculture and Interior said that they will 
produce by August 2005, for the Wildland Fire Leadership Council's 
review and approval, a joint tactical plan that will identify the steps 
and time frames for completing a cohesive strategy. We look forward to 
the agencies completing this important step. However, as noted at the 
outset of this testimony, the window of opportunity for effectively 
addressing wildland fire is rapidly closing. Thus, developing a 
cohesive strategy should not wait until 2009, when LANDFIRE and the 
Fire Program Analysis are fully developed. As we have noted, the 2002 
interagency analysis of long-term options and costs is a good starting 
point that can serve as a basis for providing the Congress with interim 
updates on options and funding needs to respond to wildland fires. 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be pleased 
to answer any questions that you or other Members of the Subcommittee 
may have at this time. 

GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

For further information on this testimony, please contact Robert A. 
Robinson at (202) 512-3841 or robinsonr@gao.gov, or Robin M. Nazzaro at 
(202) 512-3841or nazzaror@gao.gov. Individuals making key contributions 
to this testimony included David P. Bixler, Janet Frisch, Richard 
Johnson, and Chester Joy. 

FOOTNOTES

[1] GAO, Western National Forests: A Cohesive Strategy Is Needed to 
Address Catastrophic Wildfire Threats, GAO/RCED-99-65 (Washington, 
D.C.: Apr. 2, 1999)

[2] GAO, Wildland Fire Management: Important Progress Has Been Made, 
but Challenges Remain to Completing a Cohesive Strategy, GAO-05-147 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 14, 2005). 

[3] GAO/RCED-99-65. 

[4] Report to the Western Governors on the Implementation of the 10- 
Year Comprehensive Strategy, Western Governors' Association Forest 
Health Advisory Committee (Denver, Colo.: 2004).