By Elise Corcoran, Olivia Golemon, & Tristyn Sommers
Key Points
A century of fire suppression has led to dense forest conditions that require proactive fire management strategies such as prescribed fire (Quinton, 2019).
Prescribed fire is underutilized by land managers due to many barriers (Schultz et. al, 2019) including resource-related, regulations-related, and risk-related barriers (Miller et al., 2020).
Policy improvements can reduce the impact of these barriers (Miller et al., 2020).
There are five main categories for recommendations to reduce policy barriers: resource-related, regulations-related, risk-related, educational, and environmental.
The government and land managers can work together to influence these changes in order to increase implementation of prescribed fires (Miller, et al. 2020).
Public education and scientific rationale can lead to location-specific fire management. There is no one right answer for all landscapes (Shultz et al., 2018).