2015 Washington Wildfires

The 2015 wildfire season was the largest in Washington state history, with more than one million acres (400,000 ha; 1,600 sq mi) burning across the state from June to September.

As many as 3,000 firefighters including 800 Washington National Guard members were deployed to fight the fires. The 17th Field Artillery Brigade of the United States Army also deployed 200 soldiers from Joint Base Lewis–McChord to help fight the fires.

2015 Washington wildfires
2015 Washington Wildfires
Smoke plume over the Wolverine Fire on August 4
Statistics
Total fires1,541
Total area1,005,423 acres (406,880 ha)
Impacts
Deaths3
Non-fatal injuries4
Damage$253 million
Season
← 2014
2016 →

On August 21, President Barack Obama declared the fires a federal emergency.[citation needed] On August 24, the Washington Department of Natural Resources announced the Okanogan Complex fire had become the largest fire complex in Washington State history.

The Washington State Department of Natural Resources called the season the "worst-ever" in the state's history.

Progression and response

June

June 2015 was a remarkably hot month for the state of Washington, with average temperatures between 4 and 9 °F (2 and 5 °C) above normal conditions, setting new records.

By June 23, there had already been 313 wildfires across the state.

Governor's action

Governor Jay Inslee issued a proclamation on June 26, declaring a state of emergency to exist in all Washington state counties, implementing the Washington State Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan, and ordering deployment of National Guard and other organized militia for incident-related service assistance, all because of the predicted risk of wildfires in the wake of significantly drier-than-average weather in June. The Commissioner of Public Lands Peter J. Goldmark, head of the Washington Department of Natural Resources, issued an updated burn ban to the one issued June 22, as the earlier ban was superseded by the Governor's proclamation. The Commissioner's prohibition of campfires in state forests, state parks and state forestlands until September 30, 2015, was issued June 26, 2015.

Sleepy Hollow fire

2015 Washington Wildfires 
Sleepy Hollow Fire (2015) in Monitor close to where it was ignited, heading over the ridge and into the town of Wenatchee, WA
2015 Washington Wildfires 
A wildfire in 2015 destroyed 29 homes in Wenatchee as well as fruit warehouses and a recycling center.
2015 Washington Wildfires 
Mop up on a fruit warehouse fire that started at a recycling center from burning embers from a nearby wildfire- the Sleepy Hollow Fire.

The season began unprecedentedly early with the Sleepy Hollow Fire on June 28, affecting the city of Wenatchee in Chelan County, Washington. It burned 2,950 acres, destroying 29 homes and several commercial buildings. The cause of the fire is under investigation but is "likely human-caused". Officials said the fire's unusual intensity was caused by drought and record high temperatures. As a safety precaution, officials banned Fourth of July fireworks in many parts of the state. A man was arrested in connection with the fire, confessing to starting it with a disposable lighter, but faced no charges due to his mental illness.

July

By July 12, over 16,000 acres had burned, including a single fire near Ephrata, in Grant County, that had burned at least 10,000 acres. Later in the month, another major fire was triggered by farm equipment near Walla Walla and burned more than 6,000 acres over two weeks.

August

2015 Washington Wildfires 
MODIS aerial imagery of Washington on August 22, showing the Puget Sound region covered in smoke from wildfires in Eastern Washington.
2015 Washington Wildfires 
An airtanker plane dropping fire retardant over the advancing Chelan Butte wildfire (part of the Chelan Complex fire)

The extent of wildfires in August 2015 led to the federal declaration of a state of emergency in Washington state by President Barack Obama on August 21, 2015.

By August 24, over 16 active fires had burned more than 920 square miles (2,400 km2).

On August 29 there was concern that unusually strong southerly winds would cause "significant growth" of the Tunk Block and Lime Belt fires in the Okanogan complex and growth in the Chelan complex fires. The Twisp River and Nine Mile fires were about 95 percent contained.

Chelan Complex

Three fires on the south end of Lake Chelan, near the city of Chelan, merged into a complex fire and forced the immediate evacuation of over 1,000 residents on August 14. By August 16, the Reach Complex Fire had grown to 54,500 acres (22,100 ha), while the Wolverine fire burned nearly 39,000 acres (16,000 ha). According to Rico Smith, a spokesman for the firefighters near Chelan, by August 29 "about 85 homes, businesses and other residences [had] been destroyed by the Chelan complex fires."

Okanogan Complex

The Okanogan Complex Fire was formed from five separate wildfires in Okanogan County, of which all but one were caused by lightning strikes, burning approximately 96,034 acres (38,864 ha) by August 20. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) authorized the use of federal grants on August 14 for the Nine Mile Fire, one of the five fires that are part of the Okanogan Complex, determining that it constituted a "major disaster". Over 1,300 residents in the towns of Twisp and Winthrop were ordered to evacuate because of the approaching Twisp River Fire. On August 19, 2015, three firefighters were killed battling a wildfire near Twisp.

By August 24, the fire had grown to 256,657 acres (103,865 ha), surpassing the Carlton Complex fire of 2014 to become the largest wildfire complex in Washington state history. By August 28 "at least 45 primary residences, 49 cabins and 60 outbuildings [were] destroyed in the Okanogan complex fires." The size of the complex peaked at 304,782 acres (123,341 ha) on August 30, before the transfer of the 161,440-acre (65,330 ha) Tunk Block Fire under the North Star Fire on August 31.

September

International assistance

After the emergency declaration in August, President Obama asked Australian Fire Services (including those of the Black Saturday bushfires) to aid the depleted American services. By August 24, about 70 fire managers from Australia and New Zealand arrived at the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, to be briefed and provided with gear before heading west to fight the fires.

Air quality

As a result of the wildfires, air quality across the state and into Canada dropped to unhealthy levels in many cities and led to the issuing of several air quality alerts by the U.S. National Weather Service and Environment Canada. Omak, located 15 miles (24 km) northeast of the Okanogan Complex fire, reported an air quality index rating of 500 on August 24. The city of Spokane, 150 miles (240 km) from the fires, reported a rating of 188 on August 24, forcing high school athletics and other outdoor activities to be canceled. By Tuesday, August 25, Environment Canada had posted an Air Quality Health Index alert for cities as far away as Calgary, Alberta—400 miles (640 km)—with a score of 12. The Canadian Air Quality Health Index, measured on a scale of one to 10-plus with 10 as "very high risk", is based on measurements of "ozone at ground level, particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide". By Wednesday the third day of the thick haze of smoke, air quality in Calgary scored 17.

Smoke from the Chelan Complex fire was pushed westward over Seattle and the Puget Sound region by upper-level winds on August 22, causing hazy weather and worsened air quality for several days.

Aftermath

In December, Governor Jay Inslee proposed a supplemental budget that included $178 million to cover the costs incurred by the state in fighting the wildfires.

List of fires

Name Location Area burned Dates Cause Notes
Acres Hectares Began/Reported Ended
231 fire Spokane Indian Reservation and Stevens County 1,138 461 July 3, 2015 July 12, 2015 Under investigation
Alder Lake fire Gifford Pinchot National Forest 253 102 July 26, 2015 Active (10% contained) Lightning
Blankenship fire Okanogan and Wenatchee national forests 180 73 July 14, 2015 Active
Blue Creek fire Walla Walla County 6,004 2,430 July 20, 2015 Active (95% contained) Under investigation
Carpenter Road fire Spokane Indian Reservation and Stevens County 46,691 18,895 August 12, 2015 Active (25% contained) Unknown
Chelan Complex Chelan County 90,210 36,510 August 14, 2015 Active (52% contained) Complex of 5 fires
Colville Complex Ferry and Stevens counties 9,879 3,998 August 14, 2015 Active (48% contained) Complex of 3 fires
Cougar Creek Yakama Indian Reservation and Gifford Pinchot National Forest 49,200 19,900 August 10, 2015 Active (25% contained) Lightning
Douglas County Complex Douglas County 22,337 9,039 July 10, 2015 July 15, 2015 Lightning Complex of 2 fires
Grizzly Bear Complex Umatilla National Forest 72,421 29,308 August 13, 2015 Active (10% contained) Lightning Complex of 17 fires; includes portion in Oregon
Highway 8 fire Klickitat County 33,100 13,400 August 4, 2015 Active (95% contained) Unknown
Kaniksu Complex Colville National Forest and Pend Oreille County 16,335 6,611 August 11, 2015 Active (10% contained) Lightning Complex of 7 fires
Kettle Complex Ferry County 62,292 25,209 August 11, 2015 Active (16% contained) Lightning Complex of 3 fires
Marble Valley Stevens County 3,087 1,249 August 14, 2015 Active (85% contained) Unknown
Mount Adams Complex Gifford Pinchot National Forest 405 164 July 10, 2015 Active (78% contained) Unknown Complex of 4 fires
Newby Lake fire Okanogan and Wenatchee national forests 5,065 2,050 July 2, 2015 Active (95% contained) Lightning Includes portion in British Columbia
North Boulder 2 Ferry County 233 94 July 20, 2015 Active (80% contained) Lightning
North Star Colville Indian Reservation, Colville National Forest,
and Okanogan and Ferry counties
192,900 78,100 August 13, 2015 Active (22% contained) Human
Okanogan Complex Okanogan County 302,224 122,306 August 15, 2015 Active (12% contained) Lightning Complex of 5 fires; second-largest in Washington state history
Includes portion in British Columbia
Paradise Fire Olympic National Park 2,796 1,132 May 15, 2015 Active (40% contained) Lightning
PC Complex Clark and Cowlitz counties 129 52 July 16, 2015 July 24, 2015 Human Complex of 5 fires
Saddle Lakes fire Saddle Mountain National Wildlife Refuge 14,357 5,810 June 28, 2015 July 16, 2015 Lightning
Sleepy Hollow fire Chelan County 2,950 1,190 June 28, 2015 July 6, 2015 Human
Thunder Creek North Cascades National Park 103 42 May 30, 2015 Active (60% contained) Lightning
Twenty-One Mile Grade Colville Indian Reservation 2,250 910 July 1, 2015 July 10, 2015 Human
Upper Skagit Complex North Cascades National Park 7,878 3,188 August 10, 2015 Active (37% contained) Lightning Complex of 8 fires
Williams fire Stevens County 332 134 July 3, 2015 July 10, 2015 Under investigation
Wolverine fire Wenatchee National Forest 62,167 25,158 June 29, 2015 Active (28% contained) Lightning Part of Chelan Complex
    Notes

See also

References

Tags:

2015 Washington Wildfires Progression and response2015 Washington Wildfires International assistance2015 Washington Wildfires Air quality2015 Washington Wildfires Aftermath2015 Washington Wildfires List of fires2015 Washington Wildfires

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