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Concerns about Cost Sharing between Federal and Nonfederal Entities' 
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Report to the Chairman, Subcommittee on Public Lands and Forests, 
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

May 2006: 

Wildland Fire Suppression: 

Lack of Clear Guidance Raises Concerns about Cost Sharing between 
Federal and Nonfederal Entities: 

Wildland Fire Suppression Cost Sharing: 

GAO-06-570: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-06-570, a report to the Chairman, Subcommittee on 
Public Lands and Forests, Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, 
U.S. Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Wildland fires burn millions of acres each year, requiring substantial 
investments of firefighting assets. Since 2000, federal suppression 
costs alone have averaged more than $1 billion annually. Wildland fires 
can burn or threaten both federal and nonfederal lands and resources, 
including homes in or near wildlands, an area commonly called the 
wildland-urban interface. Cooperative agreements between federal and 
nonfederal firefighting entities provide the framework for working 
together and sharing costs. GAO was asked to (1) review how federal and 
nonfederal entities share the costs of suppressing wildland fires that 
burn or threaten both of their lands and resources and (2) identify any 
concerns that these entities may have with the existing cost-sharing 
framework. 

What GAO Found: 

Federal and nonfederal entities used a variety of methods to share the 
costs of fighting wildland fires affecting both of their lands and 
resources. Cooperative agreements between federal and nonfederal 
firefighting entities—which are developed and agreed to by the entities 
involved—provide the framework for cost sharing and typically list 
several cost-sharing methods available to the entities. The agreements 
GAO reviewed, however, often lacked clear guidance for federal and 
nonfederal officials to use in deciding which method to apply to a 
specific fire. As a result, cost-sharing methods were applied 
inconsistently within and among states, even for fires with similar 
characteristics. For example, GAO found that in one state, the costs 
for suppressing a large fire that threatened homes were shared solely 
according to the proportion of acres burned within each entity’s area 
of fire protection responsibility. Yet, costs for a similar fire within 
the same state were shared differently. For this fire, the state agreed 
to pay for certain aircraft and fire engines used to protect the 
wildland-urban interface, while the remaining costs were shared on the 
basis of acres burned. In contrast to the two methods used in this 
state, officials in another state used yet a different cost-sharing 
method for two similar large fires that threatened homes, apportioning 
costs each day for personnel, aircraft, and equipment deployed on 
particular lands, such as the wildland-urban interface. The type of 
cost-sharing method ultimately used is important because it can have 
significant financial consequences for the entities involved, 
potentially amounting to millions of dollars. 

Both federal and nonfederal agency officials raised a number of 
concerns about the current cost-sharing framework. First, some federal 
officials were concerned that because guidance is unclear about which 
cost-sharing methods are most appropriate in particular circumstances, 
it can be difficult to reach agreement with nonfederal officials on a 
method that all parties believe distributes suppression costs 
equitably. Second, some nonfederal officials expressed concerns that 
the emergence of alternative cost-sharing methods is causing nonfederal 
entities to bear a greater share of fire suppression costs than in the 
past. In addition, both federal and nonfederal officials believed that 
the inconsistent application of these cost-sharing methods has led to 
inequities among states in the proportion of costs borne by federal and 
nonfederal entities. Finally, some federal officials also expressed 
concern that the current framework for sharing costs insulates state 
and local governments from the increasing costs of protecting the 
wildland-urban interface. Therefore, nonfederal entities may have a 
reduced incentive to take steps that could help mitigate fire risks, 
such as requiring homeowners to use fire-resistant materials and 
landscaping. On the basis of a review of previous federal reports and 
interviews with federal and nonfederal officials, GAO believes that 
these concerns may reflect a more fundamental issue—that federal and 
nonfederal entities have not clearly defined their financial 
responsibilities for wildland fire suppression, particularly those for 
protecting the wildland-urban interface. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior, 
working with relevant state entities, provide more specific guidance on 
when to use particular cost-sharing methods and clarify the financial 
responsibilities for fires that burn or threaten to burn across 
multiple jurisdictions. The Forest Service and Interior generally 
agreed with the findings and recommendations. The National Association 
of State Foresters disagreed, stating that the recommendations would 
not provide the flexibility needed to address the variability in local 
circumstances and state laws. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-570]. 

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

[End of Section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Unclear Guidance and Inconsistent Application of Cost-Sharing Methods 
Can Have Significant Financial Consequences for Entities Involved: 

Current Cost-Sharing Framework Raises Several Concerns: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Characteristics of the Eight Fires That GAO Reviewed: 

Appendix III: Comments from the USDA Forest Service: 

GAO Comments: 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of the Interior: 

Appendix V: Comments from the National Association of State Foresters: 

GAO Comments: 

Appendix VI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Table: 

Table 1: Master Agreements for 12 Western States Varied in the Cost- 
Sharing Methods Specified: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: The Varied Cost-Sharing Methods Used for Eight Similar Fires 
We Reviewed: 

Figure 2: Distribution of Costs under the Actual Cost-Sharing Method 
Used Compared with an Acres-Burned Method: 

Abbreviations: 

FEMA: Federal Emergency Management Agency: 
IMT: incident management team: 
NASF: National Association of State Foresters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

Washington, DC 20548: 

May 30, 2006: 

The Honorable Larry E. Craig: 
Chairman, Subcommittee on Public Lands and Forests: 
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources: 
United States Senate: 

Dear Mr. Chairman: 

Wildland fires burn millions of acres of land each year. Although 
wildland fires triggered by lightning are a natural, inevitable, and 
necessary ecological process, past federal fire suppression policies 
have led to an accumulation of fuels and contributed to larger and more 
severe wildland fires. In addition, as human development continues to 
expand in or near wildlands--an area commonly known as the wildland- 
urban interface--wildland fires increasingly threaten not only federal 
lands and public resources, such as forests and watersheds, but also 
nonfederal lands and resources, including homes and other structures. 

Fighting wildland fires--which can burn across federal, state, and 
local jurisdictions--requires significant investments of firefighting 
personnel, aircraft, equipment, and supplies, resulting in substantial 
and increasing fire suppression expenditures. Since 2000, federal 
suppression expenditures alone have averaged more than $1 billion 
annually. In addition, nonfederal entities, such as state and local 
governments, can spend hundreds of millions of dollars during severe 
fire years. Firefighting efforts are mobilized through an interagency 
incident management system, which depends on the close cooperation and 
coordination of federal, state, tribal, and local fire protection 
entities. At the federal level, five principal agencies are involved in 
firefighting efforts--the Forest Service within the Department of 
Agriculture and four agencies within the Department of the 
Interior.[Footnote 1] Federal and nonfederal firefighting entities 
share their personnel, equipment, and supplies and work together to 
fight fires, regardless of which entity has jurisdiction over the 
burning lands. Agreements between cooperating entities, commonly 
referred to as master agreements, govern these cooperative fire 
protection efforts and include general provisions for sharing 
firefighting costs. According to federal officials, these provisions, 
and the guidance on available cost-sharing methods, have been changing 
over the years, in part, to address the continuing expansion of the 
wildland-urban interface and the resulting increase in nonfederal 
resources at risk from wildland fire. 

In this context of both the increasing size and severity of wildland 
fires and the rising costs of suppressing fires and protecting federal 
and nonfederal lands and resources, you asked us to (1) review how 
federal and nonfederal entities share the costs of suppressing wildland 
fires that burn or threaten both of their lands and resources and (2) 
identify any concerns federal and nonfederal entities may have with the 
existing cost-sharing framework. To address these objectives, we 
reviewed federal statutes governing cooperative fire protection 
activities; federal and interagency wildland fire policies and 
procedures; master agreements between federal and nonfederal entities 
governing cooperative fire protection in 12 western states that 
frequently experience wildland fires;[Footnote 2] and federal, state, 
and nongovernmental entities' reviews of recent large fires or other 
reports related to wildland fire suppression costs. We also interviewed 
national, regional, and local firefighting officials from the Forest 
Service and Department of the Interior agencies as well as state 
officials from Arizona, California, Colorado, and Utah. In addition, 
for two recent fires that burned or threatened both federal and 
nonfederal lands and resources in the 4 states, we reviewed the records 
listing the firefighting resources deployed, their costs, and the 
methods chosen to share these costs.[Footnote 3] We determined that 
these data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of this report. 
Appendix I contains a more detailed description of our scope and 
methodology, and appendix II contains additional information on the 
fires we reviewed. We performed our work in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards from May 2005 through May 2006. 

Results in Brief: 

Federal and nonfederal entities used a variety of methods to share the 
costs of fighting wildland fires affecting both of their lands and 
resources, but they applied these varied methods inconsistently to 
fires with similar characteristics. Master agreements between 
firefighting entities provide the framework for cost sharing and, 
typically, list several cost-sharing methods available to the entities. 
The agreements we reviewed, however, often lacked clear guidance for 
federal and nonfederal officials to use in deciding which method to 
apply to a specific fire. As a result, cost-sharing methods were 
applied inconsistently within and among states, even for fires with 
similar characteristics. For example, we found that in one state, the 
costs for suppressing a large fire that threatened homes were shared 
solely according to the proportion of acres burned within each entity's 
area of fire protection responsibility. However, costs for a similar 
fire within the same state were shared differently. For this fire, the 
state paid for certain aircraft and fire engines used to protect the 
wildland-urban interface, while the remaining costs were shared on the 
basis of acres burned. In contrast to the two methods used in this 
state, officials in another state used yet a different cost-sharing 
method for two similar large fires that threatened homes, apportioning 
costs each day for personnel, aircraft, and equipment deployed on 
particular lands, such as the wildland-urban interface. The type of 
cost-sharing method ultimately used is important because it can have 
significant financial consequences for the entities involved, 
potentially amounting to millions of dollars. 

Federal and nonfederal agency officials we interviewed raised a number 
of concerns about the current cost-sharing framework. First, some 
federal officials were concerned that because guidance is unclear about 
which cost-sharing methods are most appropriate in particular 
circumstances, it can be difficult to reach agreement with nonfederal 
officials on a method that all parties believe shares suppression costs 
equitably between affected federal and nonfederal entities, 
particularly for fires threatening the wildland-urban interface. For 
example, different cost-sharing methods were used for two fires we 
reviewed in one state, even though both fires required substantial 
suppression effort to protect the wildland-urban interface. Nonfederal 
officials agreed to pay a higher proportion of the suppression costs 
for one fire--primarily because most of the nonfederal share of the 
fire's costs were eligible for reimbursement by a Federal Emergency 
Management Agency (FEMA) grant program--but they would not agree to do 
so for the second fire. Second, nonfederal officials were concerned 
that the emergence of alternative cost-sharing methods is causing state 
and local entities to bear a greater share of suppression costs than in 
the past. Moreover, both federal and nonfederal officials were 
concerned that the inconsistent application of cost-sharing methods has 
created inequities among states in the proportion of suppression costs 
borne by federal and nonfederal entities. Finally, some federal 
officials also expressed concern that the current framework for sharing 
costs--combined with the availability of funds from FEMA to reimburse 
nonfederal entities in certain cases--insulates state and local 
governments from the increasing costs of protecting the wildland-urban 
interface. Consequently, nonfederal entities may have a reduced 
incentive for requiring the use of fire-resistant building materials 
and landscaping, which can help mitigate fire risks in the wildland- 
urban interface and thereby help reduce the costs of protecting it. On 
the basis of our review of previous federal reports and interviews with 
federal and nonfederal officials, we believe that these concerns may 
reflect a more fundamental issue--that federal and nonfederal entities 
have not clearly defined their financial responsibilities for wildland 
fire suppression, particularly those for protecting the wildland-urban 
interface. 

To strengthen the framework for sharing wildland fire suppression 
costs, we are recommending that the Secretaries of Agriculture and the 
Interior, working in conjunction with relevant state entities, (1) 
provide more specific guidance as to when particular cost-sharing 
methods should be used and (2) clarify the financial responsibilities 
for suppressing fires that burn or threaten to burn across multiple 
jurisdictions. In commenting on a draft of this report, the Forest 
Service and Interior generally agreed with our findings and 
recommendations. The National Association of State Foresters (NASF) 
also provided comments on the report and generally did not agree with 
the recommendations. NASF stated that developing national guidance 
specifying appropriate cost-sharing methods and clarifying financial 
responsibility for fire suppression costs would not provide the 
flexibility needed by local federal and nonfederal officials to address 
the variability in local circumstances and state laws. We agree that a 
certain amount of flexibility is needed, however, without more explicit 
guidance to assist local federal and nonfederal officials responsible 
for developing cost-sharing agreements for individual fires, the 
inconsistencies in how suppression costs are shared within and among 
states are likely to continue, along with concerns about perceived 
inequities. Comments from the Forest Service, Interior, and NASF are 
reprinted in appendixes III, IV, and V, respectively. 

Background: 

Wildland fires triggered by lightning are both natural and inevitable, 
and they play an important role on our nation's lands. Many ecosystems 
have adapted to periodic wildland fires, which help control vegetation 
levels and stimulate seedling regeneration and growth. Past land 
management practices, including effective fire suppression, have 
disrupted the historic frequency of wildland fires. As a result, a 
decrease in the number of acres burned nationwide during much of the 
twentieth century has led to an accumulation of dense vegetation that 
now fuels larger, more severe, and sometimes catastrophic wildland 
fires. 

In recent years, both the number of acres burned by wildland fires and 
the costs to suppress fires have been increasing. From 1995 through 
1999, wildland fires burned an average of 4.1 million acres each year; 
from 2000 through 2004, the fires burned an average of 6.1 million 
acres each year--an increase of almost 50 percent. During the same 
periods, the costs incurred by federal firefighting entities to 
suppress wildland fires more than doubled, from an average of $500 
million annually to more than $1.3 billion annually.[Footnote 4] 
Although efforts to fight these larger, more severe fires have 
accounted for much of the increase in suppression costs, the continuing 
development of homes and communities in areas at risk from wildland 
fires and the efforts to protect these structures also contribute to 
the increasing costs. Forest Service and university researchers 
estimate that about 44 million homes in the lower 48 states are located 
in areas that meet or intermingle with wildlands--commonly referred to 
as the wildland-urban interface.[Footnote 5] When fire threatens the 
wildland-urban interface, firefighting entities often need to use 
substantial resources to fight the fire and protect homes, including 
firefighters, fire engines, and aircraft to drop retardant. Although 
firefighters are able to protect many homes threatened by wildland 
fires, these fires have burned an average of about 850 homes each year 
in the United States since 1984. 

Because one firefighting entity alone cannot handle all wildland fires 
that may occur in its jurisdiction, federal and nonfederal entities 
work together to protect lands and resources and to fight fires. At the 
federal level, five principal agencies are involved in fire 
suppression--the Forest Service within the Department of Agriculture 
and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of Land Management, Fish and 
Wildlife Service, and National Park Service within the Department of 
the Interior. In addition, nonfederal entities--including state 
forestry entities and tribal, county, city, and rural fire departments-
-play an important role in protecting resources and fighting fires. 
Federal and nonfederal entities enter into master agreements that 
govern their cooperative fire protection activities, including wildland 
fire suppression, and provide for sharing the costs of these 
efforts.[Footnote 6] To share suppression costs for a specific fire, 
local representatives of federal and nonfederal firefighting entities 
responsible for protecting lands and resources affected by the fire 
decide which costs will be shared and for what period. They document 
their decisions in a cost-sharing agreement for that fire. These local 
representatives can include federal officials from a national forest, a 
Bureau of Land Management district office, or a national park and 
nonfederal officials from the state or other entities. In developing 
the cost-sharing agreement for a specific fire, these officials are 
guided by the terms of the master agreement. 

As wildland fire suppression costs have continued to rise, increasing 
attention has focused on how suppression costs for multijurisdictional 
fires are shared. According to federal officials, in the past these 
cooperating entities often shared suppression costs on the basis of the 
proportion of acres burned in each entity's protection area. These 
officials explained that this method is relatively easy to apply and 
works well when the lands affected by a wildland fire are similar. In 
2000, federal officials updated interagency policy to include, among 
other things, additional information about alternative cost-sharing 
methods. According to a federal official, the interagency policy was 
updated, in part, in response to requests for additional guidance on 
cost sharing.[Footnote 7] In addition to the acres-burned method, the 
policy describes two alternative methods for sharing the costs of fire 
suppression efforts.[Footnote 8] Under the first alternative--you 
order, you pay--each entity pays for the firefighting personnel, 
aircraft, and equipment it orders, regardless of where these resources 
are deployed during a fire. Under the second alternative--cost 
apportionment--entities share total fire costs according to the 
assignment or actual use each day of firefighting personnel, aircraft, 
and equipment in federal or nonfederal protection areas. Indirect costs 
can then be shared in the same proportions as these direct 
costs.[Footnote 9] According to the interagency policy, however, the 
cost-sharing terms of the master agreements take precedence. 

To facilitate an effective response to wildland fires--including those 
affecting both federal and nonfederal jurisdictions--firefighting 
entities in the United States use an interagency incident management 
system. This system provides an organizational structure that expands 
to meet a fire's complexity and demands and allows entities to share 
firefighting personnel, aircraft, and equipment. When a fire is first 
detected, firefighting entities normally follow a principle of "closest 
available resource," whereby, regardless of jurisdiction, the closest 
available firefighting personnel and equipment respond to the fire. The 
firefighter managing the suppression efforts is called the incident 
commander. Typically, when a fire is first detected, it is classified 
as a type 5--the least complex--or type 4 fire, depending on the fire 
and the number of firefighters needed to fight it. If additional 
firefighting assets are needed, the incident commander orders them 
through a three-tiered system of local, regional, and national dispatch 
centers. Federal, state, tribal, and local entities and private 
contractors supply the firefighting personnel, aircraft, equipment, and 
supplies, which are coordinated and dispatched through these centers. 
If the fire escapes initial suppression efforts, officials may request 
a type 3 incident commander and additional firefighting assets. The 
fire may grow in size or complexity into a type 2 or type 1 fire, the 
latter being the most complex. For such fires, officials may request an 
incident management team that includes not only an incident commander 
but a cadre of personnel to handle command, planning, logistics, 
operations, and finance functions. Nationally, there are 17 type 1 
incident management teams available to manage the most complex fires. 
An additional 38 type 2 teams are available to manage large fires that 
are less complex. 

In 2000, in response to a decade of severe wildland fires, the 
Departments of Agriculture and the Interior developed a National Fire 
Plan. This plan comprises several strategic documents that together 
address how to respond to wildland fires, reduce the impacts of these 
fires on communities and the environment, and ensure sufficient 
firefighting resources for the future.[Footnote 10] The National Fire 
Plan encourages collaboration and cooperation among a variety of 
stakeholders, including federal, state, and local firefighting and 
other government entities; nongovernmental entities; and property 
owners. The plan includes a 10-year comprehensive strategy and an 
associated implementation plan that outline a collaborative approach 
for reducing wildland fire risks to communities and the environment. 
The implementation plan includes steps addressing four key areas-- 
improving fire prevention and suppression, reducing hazardous fuels, 
restoring fire-adapted ecosystems, and promoting community assistance-
-and identifies parties to help carry out these steps. For example, to 
help protect structures and communities, state and local entities are 
encouraged to develop and adopt local land-use plans and ordinances to 
help reduce the wildland fire risks to homes and other structures. To 
help meet National Fire Plan goals, Congress provided funding for 
programs to assist not only federal firefighting entities but also 
nonfederal entities and communities. For fiscal years 2001 through 
2005, assistance to nonfederal entities and communities totaled $436 
million ($462 million adjusted for inflation). These funds--in the form 
of grants or other assistance administered by the Departments of 
Agriculture and the Interior--were used to train state and local 
firefighters and acquire firefighting equipment, carry out hazardous 
fuel treatments, conduct hazard assessments and assist communities in 
developing community wildland fire protection plans, and educate 
homeowners and others on preventive steps to help reduce their risk 
from wildland fires. 

Unclear Guidance and Inconsistent Application of Cost-Sharing Methods 
Can Have Significant Financial Consequences for Entities Involved: 

Federal and nonfederal entities included in our review used a variety 
of methods to share the costs of fighting fires that burned or 
threatened both federal and nonfederal lands and resources. Although 
master agreements between federal and nonfederal entities provided the 
framework for cost sharing and, typically, listed several cost-sharing 
methods, the agreements often lacked clear guidance for officials to 
follow in deciding which cost-sharing method to apply to a specific 
fire. Consequently, for eight fires we reviewed in four states, we 
found varied cost-sharing methods used and an inconsistent application 
of these methods within and among states, although the fires had 
similar characteristics. The type of cost-sharing method chosen is 
important because it can have significant financial consequences for 
the federal and nonfederal entities involved. 

Master Agreements Provided Cost-Sharing Framework, but Those We 
Reviewed Lacked Clear Guidance: 

Master agreements provide the framework for federal and nonfederal 
entities to work together and share the costs of fighting wildland 
fires. The master agreements we reviewed for 12 western states all 
directed federal and nonfederal entities to develop a separate 
agreement, documenting how costs were to be shared for each fire that 
burned--or, in some cases, threatened to burn--across multiple 
jurisdictions. The master agreements also listed one or more methods 
that could be used for sharing costs (see table 1). The master 
agreement for Idaho was the only one of the agreements reviewed that 
did not cite any specific methods for sharing multijurisdictional fire 
suppression costs. Three other master agreements--for Alaska, Arizona, 
and New Mexico--provided that firefighting entities should distribute 
suppression costs exclusively or primarily on the basis of the 
percentage of acres burned in each entity's jurisdiction, although two 
of the agreements permitted another method if all parties agreed to use 
it. The master agreements for the remaining 8 states listed a variety 
of methods that could be used to share suppression costs. Although, the 
specific methods varied from agreement to agreement, they included 
acres burned, cost apportionment, or variations of these or other 
methods. 

Table 1: Master Agreements for 12 Western States Varied in the Cost- 
Sharing Methods Specified: 

State: Alaska; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: Checked; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
[Empty]; 

State: Arizona; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: Checked; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
[Empty]; 

State: California; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
Checked; 

State: Colorado; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
Checked; 

State: Idaho; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
Checked; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
[Empty]; 

State: Montana; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
Checked; 

State: Nevada; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
Checked; 

State: New Mexico; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: Checked; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
[Empty]; 

State: Oregon; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
Checked; 

State: Utah; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
Checked; 

State: Washington; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
Checked; 

State: Wyoming; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: No Specific Method: 
[Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Acres burned was the 
primary or only method: [Empty]; 
Cost-sharing method specified in master agreement: Multiple methods: 
Checked; 

Source: GAO analysis of data provided by the Forest Service. 

[End of table] 

The master agreements we reviewed provided a framework for cost 
sharing, but they did not provide clear guidance for federal and 
nonfederal officials to follow in deciding which method to use for a 
specific fire. Only one master agreement, the agreement for Alaska, 
clearly stated that an acres-burned method should always be used. The 
agreement noted, however, that this method may distribute suppression 
costs disproportionately to the cost of protecting lands and resources 
in a particular jurisdiction. The acres-burned method spreads fire 
suppression costs evenly across the affected landscape, a distribution 
that may not recognize extra fire suppression costs incurred to protect 
lands and resources in one entity's jurisdiction. Most of the master 
agreements we reviewed for the remaining 11 states listed multiple, 
alternative cost-sharing methods but did not provide clear guidance on 
when each method should be used. For example, master agreements for 
several states defined three cost-sharing methods, including cost 
apportionment. These master agreements noted that the cost- 
apportionment method was "the most equitable method and should be used 
when a type 1 team is assigned" to manage a wildland fire, but they 
provided no further guidance about when the other methods should be 
used. Similarly, the master agreement for another state, Montana, 
suggested that an acres-burned method be used when entities' 
responsibilities, objectives, and suppression costs are similar, but 
the agreement did not describe when the other three listed methods 
should be used. Finally, the joint master agreement for Oregon and 
Washington[Footnote 11] listed five possible cost-sharing methods. The 
agreement stated that some of the cost-sharing methods described were 
typically used on "smaller, less complex" fires and others were 
typically applied to "larger, more complex" fires. It did not define, 
however, at what point a fire crosses the threshold from smaller and 
less complex to larger and more complex. 

Two other master agreements prescribed a primary cost-sharing method 
but allowed the use of alternative methods without explicitly stating 
under what circumstances an alternative method would be appropriate. 
The master agreements for these states--Arizona and New Mexico-- 
stipulated that firefighting entities share suppression costs on an 
acres-burned basis unless federal and nonfederal officials jointly 
agreed to use an alternative method. But the agreements for these 
states did not clearly delineate the circumstances that would warrant 
use of such an alternative. The master agreement for New Mexico, for 
example, cited "extra suppression effort," and the agreement for 
Arizona referred to "an unusually high amount" of suppression activity 
as prerequisites for distributing suppression costs on a basis other 
than acres burned. The agreements did not define what constitutes 
"extra suppression effort" or an "unusually high amount" of suppression 
activity. 

In addition to providing limited guidance on cost-sharing methods, the 
master agreements we reviewed also provided unclear guidance on whether 
estimated or actual costs should be shared between federal and 
nonfederal entities. Although estimated costs can be more quickly 
determined than actual costs--often by the end of a fire--estimated 
costs can be incomplete or inaccurate. For example, federal and 
nonfederal officials with whom we spoke in California said that in 
their experience, estimated costs could differ from actual costs by as 
much as 30 percent. Such discrepancies can occur because not all costs 
are available and entered into the accounting system at the time of a 
fire. In addition, some costs entered into the accounting system at the 
time of a fire, such as federal personnel costs, are in fact estimated 
costs. According to federal officials, actual cost data may take from 
several weeks to several months to become available. 

For several of the fires we reviewed, total actual fire costs were much 
higher than the costs estimated immediately after the fire. For one 
fire we reviewed in Colorado, for example, total estimated fire costs 
increased from $5.4 million at the end of the fire to $7 million as of 
February 2006--an increase of 29 percent. Federal and state officials 
have been using actual costs to finalize federal and nonfederal 
entities' shares. In another example, for a fire we reviewed in 
Arizona, total costs increased from an estimated $17.3 million at the 
end of the fire to $19.4 million as of February 2006--an increase of 
more than 12 percent. In this case, nonfederal entities' share of costs 
was agreed to on the basis of estimated costs. As a result, federal 
entities will bear the total increase. 

Cost-Sharing Methods Were Inconsistently Applied for the Eight Fires We 
Reviewed: 

Federal and nonfederal entities used varied cost-sharing methods for 
the eight fires we reviewed, although the fires had similar 
characteristics. As shown in figure 1, the cost-sharing methods used 
sometimes varied within a state or from state to state. 

Figure 1: The Varied Cost-Sharing Methods Used for Eight Similar Fires 
We Reviewed: 

[See PDF for image] 

[A] A complex consists of two or more individual fires located in the 
same general area and managed by a single incident commander. 

[End of figure] 

The costs for the two fires that we reviewed in Utah were shared using 
two different methods, although both fires had similar characteristics. 
For the Blue Springs Fire, federal and nonfederal officials agreed that 
aircraft and engine costs of protecting an area in the wildland-urban 
interface during a 2-day period would be assigned to the state and that 
the remaining costs would be shared on the basis of acres burned. 
Federal and state officials explained that, because the Blue Springs 
Fire qualified for assistance from FEMA, state officials agreed to bear 
a larger portion of the total fire suppression costs.[Footnote 12] In 
contrast, state officials were reluctant to share costs in the same 
manner on the Sunrise Complex of fires. Although these fires also 
threatened the wildland-urban interface, they did not meet the 
eligibility requirements for FEMA reimbursement of nonfederal costs. 
Consequently, federal and nonfederal officials agreed to share costs 
for the Sunrise Complex on the basis of acres burned. 

The costs for the two fires we reviewed in Arizona were also treated 
differently from each other. For the Cave Creek Complex, federal and 
state officials agreed to share suppression costs using an acres-burned 
method for the southern portion of the fire, which encompassed federal, 
state, and city lands and required substantial efforts to protect the 
wildland-urban interface. The federal government paid the full costs 
for the northern portion of the fire, which burned almost exclusively 
on federal land although some efforts had also been taken on federal 
lands to protect an area of wildland-urban interface northeast of the 
fire. Forest Service regional officials who conducted a postfire review 
expressed concern about the method chosen for the Cave Creek Complex 
because they believed that it did not equitably share the fire 
suppression costs among the affected entities, especially the costs of 
protecting the wildland-urban interface. The Arizona state forester 
explained, in contrast, that he and local forest officials agreed to 
use an acres-burned method because they did not believe that an 
unusually high amount of suppression effort had gone toward protecting 
nonfederal lands and resources. 

Unlike the Cave Creek Complex, federal and nonfederal officials were 
unable to reach any agreement on how to share costs for the Florida 
Fire in Arizona. Officials from the affected national forest had 
proposed a cost-sharing agreement, whereby the state would pay the 
costs of firefighting personnel, equipment, and aircraft used to 
protect the wildland-urban interface, and all other fire suppression 
costs would be paid by the federal government. The state forester, 
however, did not agree with this proposal. He explained that he 
believed that the Forest Service, not the state, was responsible for 
protecting areas of the wildland-urban interface threatened by the 
Florida Fire and that he was not authorized to agree to the terms of 
the proposed agreement.[Footnote 13] Federal and state officials were 
not able to reach agreement, and, according to federal officials, no 
further discussions were planned. 

Methods used to share suppression costs for fires with similar 
characteristics also varied among states. For example, costs for the 
fires we reviewed in California and Colorado were shared using methods 
different from those used for similar fires we reviewed in Arizona and 
Utah. In California, federal and nonfederal officials agreed to share 
the costs of two fires using the cost-apportionment method--that is, 
costs were apportioned on the basis of where firefighting personnel and 
equipment were deployed. Officials said that they had often used this 
method since the mid-1980s because they believed that the benefit it 
provides in more equitable cost sharing among affected firefighting 
entities outweighs the additional time required to apportion the costs. 
In contrast, federal and state officials in Colorado shared suppression 
costs for both of the fires we reviewed in that state using guidance 
they had developed and officially adopted in 2005, called "fire cost 
share principles."[Footnote 14] Under these principles, aviation costs 
for fires burning in the wildland-urban interface are shared equally 
for 72 hours,[Footnote 15] and other fire suppression costs, such as 
firefighting personnel and equipment, are shared on the basis of acres 
burned. State officials said that they developed the principles because 
they did not want firefighting officials to be reluctant to order 
needed resources due to concerns about which entity would pay for them. 
They added that using the principles is less labor-intensive than cost 
apportionment and better distributes the cost of expensive aviation 
assets than an acres-burned method alone. In addition, for the Mason 
Gulch Fire, Colorado officials agreed to pay for some fire engines that 
were used to protect homes in the wildland-urban interface during one 
operational period. 

The Cost-Sharing Method Used Can Lead to Significantly Different 
Financial Outcomes: 

Having clear guidance as to when particular cost-sharing methods should 
be used is important because the type of method ultimately agreed upon 
for any particular fire can have significant financial consequences for 
the firefighting entities involved. To illustrate the effect of the 
method chosen, we compared the distribution of federal and nonfederal 
costs for the five fires we reviewed in which the actual cost-sharing 
method used was not acres burned with what the distribution would have 
been if the method used had been acres burned (see fig. 2). 

Figure 2: Distribution of Costs under the Actual Cost-Sharing Method 
Used Compared with an Acres-Burned Method: 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: For each illustrated fire, we estimated costs under an acres- 
burned method by multiplying the total costs for each fire by the 
percentage of affected acres under nonfederal and federal protection, 
respectively. Dollars were not adjusted for inflation. 

[A] Data for these California fires, which occurred in 2004, reflect 
total actual suppression costs. 

[B] Data for these Colorado and Utah fires--which, according to the 
fire officials involved, were the best available as of March 2006-- 
reflect a combination of actual suppression costs and estimated costs, 
when actual costs were not available. Because final actual shares of 
the costs had not been determined for the Mason Gulch Fire at the time 
of our review, we worked with federal officials to estimate the federal 
and nonfederal shares on the basis of the fire's actual cost-sharing 
agreement. The federal and nonfederal shares of total costs calculated 
at final settlement by firefighting entities involved in the Mason 
Gulch Fire may differ from these estimates. 

[End of figure] 

We found that the distribution of costs between federal and nonfederal 
entities differed, sometimes substantially, depending on the cost- 
sharing method used. Of the five fires included in our review, the 
largest differences occurred for the two fires in California. Officials 
shared the costs for each of these fires using a cost-apportionment 
method. For the Deep Fire, federal entities paid $6.2 million, and 
nonfederal entities paid $2.2 million. Had the costs been shared on the 
basis of acres burned, federal entities would have paid an additional 
$1.7 million, and nonfederal entities would have paid that much less 
because most of the acres burned were on federal lands. According to 
federal and state officials, the nonfederal entities bore a larger 
share of the cost than they would have under an acres-burned method 
because (1) substantial aircraft, fire engines, and personnel were used 
to protect nonfederal lands and resources, primarily in the wildland- 
urban interface, and (2) the costs for protecting these nonfederal 
lands and resources were assigned to the nonfederal entities. In 
contrast, for the other California fire we reviewed, the Pine Fire, 
federal firefighting entities would have paid about $2 million less, 
and nonfederal entities would have paid that much more under an acres- 
burned method. Under the cost-apportionment method, federal entities 
paid $5.2 million, and nonfederal entities paid $8.1 million. According 
to a federal official who worked on apportioning costs for that fire, 
the higher costs that the federal entities paid under cost 
apportionment were largely due to extensive firefighting efforts on 
federal land to ensure that the fire was extinguished. 

In Colorado and Utah, which for three fires used cost-sharing methods 
other than cost apportionment and acres burned, the differences in 
federal and state entities' shares between the methods used and the 
acres-burned method were less pronounced. This is likely because the 
cost-sharing methods used still relied heavily on acres burned. In each 
case, federal entities' shares would have been more and nonfederal 
shares less had an acres-burned method been used, due to the efforts to 
protect the wildland-urban interface. For example, the federal share of 
costs for the Blue Springs Fire in Utah would have been about $400,000 
more and the nonfederal share that much less if an acres-burned method 
had been used for the whole fire. In Colorado, we estimated that the 
federal share of costs for the Mason Gulch Fire would have been about 
$200,000 more and the nonfederal share that much less under an acres- 
burned method. For the McGruder Fire, where the number of federal and 
nonfederal acres burned were nearly identical and the total fire cost 
of about $800,000 was much less than the cost of other fires we 
reviewed, the change in the distribution of costs between the method 
used and acres burned--about $30,000--was much less than for the other 
fires. 

For two other fires we reviewed in which federal and nonfederal 
entities had agreed to use the acres-burned method, nonfederal entities 
might have borne a greater proportion of the costs had a different cost-
sharing method been used. For these two fires, in Arizona and Utah, 
federal and state officials we interviewed had identified many aviation 
and ground firefighting assets that went toward protecting nonfederal 
lands and resources. Although we were unable to fully estimate a 
distribution of costs using an alternative method due to limitations in 
the data available, our analysis suggested, and many of the officials 
we interviewed acknowledged, that the nonfederal entities would have 
borne a larger share of the costs. 

Current Cost-Sharing Framework Raises Several Concerns: 

Federal and nonfederal agency officials we interviewed raised a number 
of concerns about the current cost-sharing framework. First, some 
federal officials said that because master agreements and other 
policies do not provide clear guidance about which cost-sharing methods 
to use, it has sometimes been difficult to obtain a cost-sharing 
agreement that they believe shares suppression costs equitably. Second, 
nonfederal officials were concerned that the emergence of alternative 
cost-sharing methods has caused nonfederal entities to bear a greater 
share of fire suppression costs than in the past. Finally, some federal 
officials expressed concern that the current framework for sharing 
costs insulates state and local governments from the cost of protecting 
the wildland-urban interface, thereby reducing their incentive to take 
steps that could help mitigate fire risks and reduce suppression costs 
in the wildland-urban interface. On the basis of our review of previous 
federal reports and interviews with federal and nonfederal officials, 
we believe these concerns may reflect a more fundamental issue--that 
federal and nonfederal entities have not clearly defined their 
financial responsibilities for wildland fire suppression, particularly 
for the wildland-urban interface. 

Lack of Clear Guidance Can Lead to Difficulties in Sharing Costs: 

Some federal officials said that the lack of clear guidance can make it 
difficult to agree to use a cost-sharing method that they believe 
equitably distributes suppression costs between federal and nonfederal 
entities, particularly for fires that threaten the wildland-urban 
interface. For example, different cost-sharing methods were used for 
the two fires we reviewed in Utah, even though both fires required 
substantial suppression efforts to protect the wildland-urban 
interface. For the Blue Springs Fire, nonfederal officials agreed to 
pay a higher proportion of the suppression costs than they would have 
paid had an acres-burned method been used, because they recognized the 
substantial effort undertaken to protect the wildland-urban interface 
and because most of the state's costs for that fire were eligible for 
FEMA reimbursement. For the Sunrise Complex, the federal official who 
negotiated the cost-sharing agreement said that using a method other 
than acres burned might have better recognized and distributed the 
costs of the suppression effort necessary to protect the wildland-urban 
interface. Nonfederal officials, however, said they were not willing to 
pay a higher proportion of costs for the Sunrise Complex because for 
that fire, the state was ineligible for financial assistance from FEMA. 
The federal official said that because of the state officials' 
unwillingness to use a method other than acres burned, and because of 
the lack of clear guidance about which cost-sharing method should be 
used, he agreed to use an acres-burned method and did not seek a cost- 
sharing agreement that would have assigned more of the Sunrise 
Complex's costs to the nonfederal entities. Some federal officials in 
Arizona expressed similar views, saying that the lack of clear guidance 
on sharing costs can make it difficult to reach agreement with 
nonfederal officials. For example, federal and state officials in 
Arizona did not agree on whether to share costs for the Florida Fire in 
that state. 

Officials from NASF and the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State 
Lands raised a related issue--that existing guidance does not specify 
how costs should be shared when one entity's management goals alter 
fire suppression strategies and increase costs. For example, these 
officials said that federal agencies may restrict the use of mechanized 
equipment in wilderness areas or in sensitive wildlife habitat and 
increase the use of aircraft instead. The officials did not believe 
that nonfederal entities should have to pay for the resulting higher 
costs. Utah officials said that although they have been able to reach 
cost-sharing agreements they believe are appropriate in such cases, 
guidance should be improved to recognize these situations. 

Officials from the Forest Service's and the Department of the 
Interior's national offices agreed that interagency policies for cost 
sharing could be clarified to indicate under what circumstances 
particular cost-sharing methods are most appropriate. They said that 
the acres-burned method, for example, is likely not the most equitable 
method to share costs in cases where fires threaten the wildland-urban 
interface. But they also said that it would be difficult to develop 
universal guidance requiring a particular cost-sharing method for fires 
with certain characteristics. They explained that the organization, 
responsibilities, and funding of state and local firefighting entities 
vary from state to state, and flexibility is therefore needed. The 
National Fire and Aviation Executive Board was developing a template 
for both master and cost-sharing agreements.[Footnote 16] As of May 
2006, this template had not been finalized, but our review of a draft 
version indicated that the template might not provide additional 
clarity about when each cost-sharing method should be used.[Footnote 
17] 

Nonfederal Officials Were Concerned about Increased Costs and Equity 
among States: 

While federal officials expressed the need for further guidance on how 
to share costs, nonfederal officials were concerned that the emergence 
of alternative cost-sharing methods was leading state and local 
entities to bear a greater share of suppression costs than in the past, 
and they questioned whether such an increase was appropriate. 
Nonfederal officials also said that wildland fire suppression costs 
already posed budgetary challenges for state and local entities and 
that using alternative cost-sharing methods more often could exacerbate 
the situation. State officials said that if a state's suppression costs 
in a given year exceed the funds budgeted, they must seek additional 
state funds, which can be difficult. Moreover, they said, in many 
states, protecting structures is primarily a local responsibility, and 
many local entities are unable to pay the costs of fighting a large 
fire that threatens the wildland-urban interface.[Footnote 18] Although 
clarifying guidance about which cost-sharing methods are most 
appropriate for particular circumstances could cause nonfederal 
entities to bear more wildland fire suppression costs, over the long 
term, such clarification would also allow each entity to better 
determine its budgetary needs and take steps to meet them. 

In addition to their concerns about increased costs, nonfederal as well 
as federal officials were concerned that the federal government was 
treating nonfederal entities in different states differently, thereby 
creating inequities. Federal and nonfederal officials said that because 
some states use particular cost-sharing methods more often than other 
states, the proportion of costs borne by federal and nonfederal 
entities likely varies from state to state, resulting in nonfederal 
entities' paying a higher proportion of costs in some states and a 
lower proportion in other states. For example, nonfederal officials in 
Utah said that even though they agreed to pay certain aircraft and fire 
engine costs to protect the wildland-urban interface on the Blue 
Springs Fire, they were uncertain if this method was equitable, 
particularly if nonfederal entities were not paying for similar costs 
in other states. Clarifying which cost-sharing methods should be used 
in particular situations could increase nonfederal officials' assurance 
that the federal government is treating them equitably relative to 
other states. 

Cost-Sharing Framework May Reduce Incentives to Mitigate Fire Risks in 
the Wildland-Urban Interface: 

In addition to the concerns raised about obtaining equitable cost- 
sharing agreements and about the increased costs to nonfederal 
entities, federal officials said that the current cost-sharing 
framework insulates state and local governments from the cost of 
protecting the wildland-urban interface. A variety of protective 
measures are available to help protect structures from wildland fire, 
although they are not consistently used in areas at risk. Some federal 
and nonfederal officials noted that the current framework for sharing 
costs--combined with the availability of funds from FEMA for some 
emergency fire suppression costs--may reduce the incentive for state 
and local governments to require that such measures be taken. 

Measures Are Available to Mitigate Fire Risks in the Wildland-Urban 
Interface, but They Are Not Consistently Used: 

Firefighting officials and researchers have identified a variety of 
measures that can mitigate the risk to structures from wildland fire. 
As we have previously reported, key among these measures are (1) 
reducing vegetation and flammable objects within an area of 30 to 100 
feet around a structure, often called creating a defensible space, and 
(2) using fire-resistant roofing materials and covering attic vents 
with mesh screens.[Footnote 19] In addition, fire-resistant windows and 
building materials can help prevent structures from igniting. Other 
measures, such as designing communities to ensure an adequate water 
supply for fighting fires and access for emergency vehicles, can assist 
fire suppression efforts and further reduce the risk to structures. 
Taken together, these measures can help reduce the likelihood that a 
wildland fire will damage a structure. 

Increasing the use of protective measures to mitigate the risk to 
structures from wildland fire is a key goal of the National Fire Plan. 
This plan--developed by federal wildland fire agencies and state 
governors--encourages, but does not mandate, state or local governments 
to adopt laws requiring homeowners and homebuilders to take measures to 
help protect structures from wildland fires. Because these measures 
rely on the actions of individual homeowners or on laws and land-use 
planning affecting private lands, achieving this goal is primarily a 
state and local government responsibility. The National Association of 
Counties supports this goal. 

Federal and nonfederal officials told us that the use of measures to 
help protect structures from wildland fires has become more common, but 
that such measures are not consistently used in areas at risk. The 
increased use of these measures in recent years is due in part to 
continuing federal and nonfederal efforts to educate homeowners in the 
wildland-urban interface and to state and local governments' adopting 
laws requiring that such measures be used. Education efforts, such as 
the Firewise Communities program,[Footnote 20] seek to increase the 
voluntary use of such measures by working with community leaders and 
individual homeowners. As wildland fires have become more severe and 
the number of damaged homes has grown, more state and local governments 
have adopted laws requiring homeowners or homebuilders to use measures 
to reduce the risk to structures from wildland fires. Nevertheless, 
federal and nonfederal fire officials told us that protective measures 
are not used consistently in many areas at risk from wildland fire. 
Some homeowners and homebuilders, for example, resist using fire- 
resistant landscaping and roofing because they are concerned about 
aesthetics, time, or cost. As a result, federal and nonfederal 
officials said, it can be politically difficult for state and local 
governments to adopt--and enforce--laws requiring such measures, and 
many at-risk areas have not done so. In 2004, the Western Governors' 
Association reported that greater use of protective measures was 
urgent, but the progress made was unknown.[Footnote 21] 

The states and communities we visited exhibited various degrees of 
progress in adopting laws requiring protective measures. Since 1965, 
for example, California has required homeowners in the wildland-urban 
interface to maintain 30 feet of defensible space around their homes, a 
requirement that was increased to 100 feet in 2005. This law applies to 
existing homes as well as to new construction and specifically allows 
local jurisdictions to adopt stricter standards. In areas at 
particularly high risk from wildland fires, California regulations also 
require new structures to be constructed with fire-resistant roofing 
materials and vents. The other states we visited do not have such 
statewide requirements, but they are taking a variety of steps to 
require or encourage protective measures. Utah, for example, passed a 
law in 2004 requiring its counties to adopt standards for landscaping 
and building materials if they want to be eligible to receive state 
funds to assist with fire suppression costs. According to state 
officials, exactly what will be required under these standards was 
still being determined, but once final, the standards will apply only 
to new construction, not existing structures. Similarly, Arizona did 
not have any statewide requirements, although it adopted a law in 2004 
explicitly granting local governments the authority to establish codes 
to mitigate wildland fire risk in the wildland-urban interface. 
Finally, in Colorado, laws requiring protective measures have been 
adopted primarily at the local, not state, level. Although some 
counties, such as Larimer County, required owners of new structures in 
the wildland-urban interface to use measures to help mitigate fire 
risk, others--including the three counties affected by the wildfires we 
reviewed--were educating homeowners about measures they can use to 
reduce their risk, without requiring that such measures be used. 

Cost-Sharing Framework and Federal Assistance May Reduce the Incentive 
to Require the Use of Protective Measures: 

Although measures are available to help protect structures in the 
wildland-urban interface from wildland fires, federal officials 
expressed concern--and some nonfederal officials acknowledged--that the 
use of cost-sharing methods that assign more costs to federal entities, 
and the availability of federal emergency assistance, insulate state 
and local governments from the cost of providing wildland fire 
protection. These federal officials pointed out that wildland fires 
threatening structures often require added suppression effort, such as 
an increased number of aircraft and fire engines or firefighters to 
remove vegetation around individual structures. Under some cost-sharing 
methods, such as acres burned, federal entities often end up paying a 
large proportion of the costs for these efforts. Some federal and 
nonfederal officials also noted that the availability of FEMA 
assistance to nonfederal entities--which can amount to 75 percent of 
allowable fire suppression costs for eligible fires--further insulates 
state and local governments from the cost of protecting the wildland-
urban interface. Of the eight fires included in our review, nonfederal 
officials were seeking reimbursement for the allowable costs of the 
five fires that FEMA determined met eligibility requirements. 

Federal officials suggested that to the extent that state and local 
governments are insulated from the cost of protecting the wildland- 
urban interface, these governments may have a reduced incentive to 
adopt laws requiring homeowners and homebuilders to use protective 
measures that could help mitigate fire risks. Homeowner and homebuilder 
resistance make it politically difficult to adopt and enforce such 
laws. Both federal and nonfederal officials noted, however, that 
greater use of fire-resistant building materials and landscaping could 
help reduce the cost of protecting the wildland-urban interface. Some 
officials also said that by requiring homeowners and homebuilders to 
take such measures, more of the cost of protecting the wildland-urban 
interface would then be borne by those who chose to live there. The 
Colorado State Forest Service, for example, has reported that the 
expansion of the wildland-urban interface has increased wildland fire 
suppression costs, but that these costs have not been equitably divided 
because all taxpayers--not just those who live in areas threatened by 
wildland fire--fund the cost of suppression.[Footnote 22] 

Officials' Concerns May Reflect Ambiguity over Financial 
Responsibilities: 

On the basis of our review of previous federal reports and interviews 
with federal and nonfederal officials, we believe that the concerns we 
identified may reflect a more fundamental issue--that federal and 
nonfederal firefighting entities have not clearly defined their 
financial responsibilities for wildland fire suppression, particularly 
those for protecting the wildland-urban interface. Federal officials 
said that the continuing expansion of the wildland-urban interface and 
rising fire suppression costs for protecting these areas have increased 
the importance of resolving these issues. First, federal wildland fire 
management policy states that protecting structures is the 
responsibility of state, tribal, and local entities; but the policy 
also says that, under a formal fire protection agreement specifying the 
financial responsibilities of each entity, federal agencies can assist 
nonfederal entities in protecting the exterior of structures threatened 
by wildland fire.[Footnote 23] Forest Service guidance defines actions 
to protect the exterior of structures to include removing fuels in the 
vicinity of structures and spraying water or retardant on structures or 
surrounding vegetation. Federal and nonfederal officials agreed that 
federal agencies can assist with such actions, but they did not agree 
on which entities are responsible for bearing the costs of these 
actions. Federal officials told us that the purpose of this policy is 
to allow federal agencies to use their personnel and equipment to help 
protect homes but not to bear the financial responsibility of providing 
that protection. Nonfederal officials, however, said that these actions 
are intended to keep a wildland fire from reaching structures, and 
financial responsibility should therefore be shared between both 
federal and nonfederal entities. 

Second, the presence of structures adjacent to federal lands can 
substantially alter fire suppression strategies and raise costs. A 
previous federal report and federal officials have questioned which 
entities are financially responsible for suppression actions taken on 
federal lands but intended primarily or exclusively to protect adjacent 
wildland-urban interface. Fire managers typically use existing roads 
and geographic features, such as rivers and ridgelines, as firebreaks 
to help contain wildland fires. If, however, homes and other structures 
are located between a fire and such natural firebreaks, firefighters 
may have to construct other firebreaks and rely more than they 
otherwise would on aircraft to drop fire retardant to protect the 
structures, thereby increasing suppression costs. For example, for the 
Sunrise Complex fires in Utah, federal and nonfederal officials agreed 
that if structures had not been present, they could have used easily 
accessible roads to contain the fire and would not have used as many 
aircraft. Nonfederal officials in several states, however, questioned 
the appropriateness of assigning to nonfederal entities the costs for 
suppression actions taken on federal lands. These officials, as well as 
NASF officials, also said that accumulated fuels on federal lands is 
resulting in more severe wildland fires and contributing to the 
increased cost of fire suppression.[Footnote 24] They also said that 
federal agencies are responsible for keeping wildland fires from 
burning off federal land and should, therefore, bear the costs of doing 
so. Federal officials in the states we visited recognized this 
responsibility, but some also said that with the growing awareness that 
wildland fires are inevitable in many parts of the country, policy 
should recognize that wildland fires will occur and are likely to burn 
across jurisdictional boundaries. In their view, those who own property 
in areas at risk of wildland fires share a portion of the financial 
responsibility for protecting it. Previous federal agency reports have 
also recognized this issue and have called for clarifying financial 
responsibility for such actions.[Footnote 25] 

Conclusions: 

Wildland fires are an enduring part of the landscape, and they will 
continue to affect both federal and nonfederal lands and resources. 
Federal, state, and local firefighting entities have taken great 
strides to develop a cooperative fire protection system so that these 
entities can effectively work together to respond to these fires. 
Nevertheless, where federal and nonfederal lands and resources are 
adjacent or intermingled, particularly in the wildland-urban interface, 
different views prevail about which entity is responsible for the costs 
of protecting these lands and resources. Without explicit delineation 
of each entity's firefighting financial responsibilities, federal and 
nonfederal entities' concerns about how these costs are shared are 
likely to continue. In addition, lack of clarity about respective 
financial responsibilities can also make it more difficult for both 
federal and nonfederal entities to accurately forecast and plan for 
future budget needs. As the wildland-urban interface continues to 
become a more prominent feature of the fire suppression landscape, 
contributing to rising suppression costs, the need for clarity is 
becoming more acute. Improved guidance that clearly delineates federal 
and nonfederal entities' financial responsibilities for suppressing 
wildland fires could assist all entities in better planning for, and 
during, a fire season. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To strengthen the framework for sharing wildland fire suppression 
costs, we recommend that the Secretaries of Agriculture and the 
Interior, working in conjunction with relevant state entities, take the 
following two actions: 

* provide more specific guidance as to when particular cost-sharing 
methods should be used and: 

* clarify the financial responsibilities for suppressing fires that 
burn, or threaten to burn, across multiple jurisdictions. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We received written comments on a draft of this report from the Forest 
Service and Interior. Both agencies generally concurred with our 
findings and recommendations. The Forest Service stated that it will 
clarify the guidance to the field regarding the most appropriate cost- 
share method to use in a given situation, which will serve as a place 
to begin negotiations with its partners. We recommended, however, that 
the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior work in conjunction 
with relevant state entities to develop more specific guidance. If the 
Forest Service independently clarifies guidance without engaging state 
entities that also will be affected by any changes, there is no 
assurance that these state entities will agree to the changes in cost- 
sharing methods. Interior stated, however, that it would work closely 
with the Forest Service and state agencies to clarify such guidance to 
the field. 

The Forest Service also stated that its financial responsibilities are 
clearly defined in policy. Several federal officials with whom we spoke 
during our study disagreed, however, stating that these policies do not 
clearly delineate federal entities' financial responsibility for fire 
protection, especially in regards to the wildland-urban interface. 
Although Forest Service policy states that structural fire suppression 
is the responsibility of tribal, state, or local governments and the 
Forest Service's primary responsibility and objective for structure 
protection is to suppress wildland fire before it reaches structures, 
it does not clearly define what this would constitute. Officials told 
us that such actions could include efforts on Forest Service lands to 
keep fire from crossing jurisdictional boundaries or suppression 
actions in closer proximity to a structure, such as removing vegetation 
or other flammable objects. Without a clear definition of each entity's 
protection and related financial responsibilities, it will be difficult 
to determine how to appropriately share the costs of the efforts. The 
Forest Service also provided additional comments that we have 
incorporated in this report where appropriate. The Forest Service's and 
Interior's letters are reprinted in appendixes III and IV, 
respectively, along with our evaluation of specific Forest Service 
comments in appendix III. 

In addition to these federal agencies, we also sought comments from 
NASF because of our report's potential financial implications for 
states and other nonfederal entities. NASF provided both oral comments 
and a written response to our report. NASF did not agree with our 
recommendations, stating that developing national guidance specifying 
appropriate cost-sharing methods and clarifying financial 
responsibility for fire suppression costs would not provide the 
flexibility needed by local federal and nonfederal officials to address 
the variability in local circumstances and state laws. We agree that a 
certain amount of flexibility is needed. However, without more specific 
guidance to assist federal and nonfederal officials when developing 
cost-sharing agreements for particular fires, inconsistencies in the 
methods used--as well as perceived inequities in how costs are shared 
between federal and nonfederal entities, as expressed by many officials 
with whom we spoke--are likely to continue. A copy of NASF's letter and 
our evaluation of its specific comments are included in appendix V. 

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report 
to interested congressional committees, the Secretaries of Agriculture 
and the Interior, the Chief of the Forest Service, the Director of the 
Bureau of Land Management, and other interested parties. We will also 
make copies available to others upon request. In addition, this report 
will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [Hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have questions about this report, please contact 
me at (202) 512-3841 or nazzaror@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix VI. 

Sincerely yours, 

Signed by: 

Robin M. Nazzaro: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To determine the general framework for how federal and nonfederal 
entities share suppression costs when fires burn or threaten both their 
lands and resources, we reviewed federal laws and interagency policies 
governing cost sharing for cooperative fire protection efforts. To 
identify similarities and differences in the cost-sharing framework and 
available methods from state to state, we obtained and reviewed master 
agreements between federal and nonfederal entities for 12 western 
states.[Footnote 26] Although wildland fires can affect all states, we 
focused our review on these western states, which have substantial 
federal lands and often experience wildland fires. 

To identify how cost-sharing methods are applied in different states, 
we selected a nonprobability sample of four states--Arizona, 
California, Colorado, and Utah--that used a variety of different 
methods to share wildland fire suppression costs between federal and 
nonfederal entities. In each of the four states, we selected a 
nonprobability sample of two fires that occurred in 2004 or 2005 and 
were managed by either the Forest Service or the Bureau of Land 
Management.[Footnote 27] The eight fires all burned or threatened to 
burn both federal and nonfederal lands, burned or threatened both 
natural resources and wildland-urban interface areas, and were of 
sufficient size and complexity to require type 1 or type 2 incident 
management teams for a portion of the fire. For each of the eight 
fires, we reviewed available records on firefighting personnel, 
aircraft, and equipment used for fire suppression efforts; reviewed 
fire cost data; reviewed the cost-sharing agreement that federal and 
nonfederal officials negotiated, if any; interviewed federal and 
nonfederal officials to identify the process used to select the cost- 
sharing method; and obtained agency estimates of total suppression 
costs that were based on data collected by federal agencies for each 
fire. Using this information and working with federal and nonfederal 
officials, we estimated the federal and nonfederal shares of the 
suppression costs. To determine the effect of the cost-sharing method 
selected on the relative proportion of costs borne by federal and 
nonfederal entities--for the five fires that used a cost-sharing method 
other than acres burned--we compared the estimated federal and 
nonfederal shares of costs resulting from the cost-sharing agreement to 
our estimate of what the federal and nonfederal shares of costs would 
have been if an acres-burned method had been used. We used estimates of 
suppression costs for some of the fires because the entities had not 
yet determined the actual total cost for all eight fires we reviewed. 
To determine the reliability of the data used, we reviewed previous 
audits of the federal financial systems used for the accounting of fire 
costs; interviewed federal officials knowledgeable about these systems 
to identify how data are entered into the system and what steps are 
taken to help ensure accuracy; and, working with federal and nonfederal 
officials, reviewed data on the specific firefighting assets used and 
the related costs for the eight fires. Because we were primarily 
interested in the relative proportions of fire costs borne by federal 
and nonfederal entities using different cost-sharing methods, we 
determined that these data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes 
of this study. The 12 master agreements reviewed, the four states 
visited, and the two fires we reviewed within each state are all 
nonprobability samples. The results of these samples, therefore, cannot 
be used to make inferences about all master agreements, states, or 
wildland fires. 

To identify concerns that federal and nonfederal entities may have 
about the existing cost-sharing framework, we reviewed previous reports 
on wildland fire suppression, including large fire cost reviews 
conducted by the Departments of Agriculture or the Interior, a series 
of reports by the National Academy of Public Administration, and 
reports by state entities. We interviewed federal officials from the 
Department of the Interior's and Forest Service's national offices and 
the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho; Forest Service 
officials from the four regional offices and other Forest Service 
officials involved with the fires we reviewed; and Bureau of Land 
Management officials from the two state offices and several district 
offices involved with the fires we reviewed. We also interviewed 
additional federal officials in other regions and states to obtain a 
broader perspective on any concerns with the cost-sharing framework. 
Nonfederal officials that we interviewed included state--and, in some 
cases, local--officials from the four states we visited, as well as 
officials from Montana, Oregon, and Washington. We also reviewed 
reports by or interviewed officials from the National Association of 
State Foresters (NASF), the Western Governors' Association, and the 
National Association of Counties. To better understand the concern 
officials raised about the cost-sharing framework and incentives to 
increase the use of protective measures, we reviewed federal policies 
and reports on protecting the wildland-urban interface, including the 
National Fire Plan and the federal wildland fire management policy; 
federal laws and regulations governing Federal Emergency Management 
Agency (FEMA) assistance; and reports by GAO,[Footnote 28] the American 
Planning Association,[Footnote 29] and state audit entities. 

We performed our work in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards from May 2005 through May 2006. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Characteristics of the Eight Fires That GAO Reviewed: 

State: Arizona; 

Fire: Cave Creek Complex; 
Date: June-July 2005; 
IMT type[A]: 1; 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Federal: 231,171 (94%); 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Nonfederal: 15,543 (6%); 
Total acres burned: 246,714; 
Total cost: $19,413,000. 

Fire: Florida Fire; 
Date: July 2005; 
IMT type[A]: 1; 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Federal: 22,549 (97); 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Nonfederal: 634 (3); 
Total acres burned: 23,183; 
Total cost: 6,217,000. 

State: California; 

Fire: Deep Fire; 
Date: August 2004; 
IMT type[A]: 1; 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Federal: 2,928 (93); 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Nonfederal: 220 (7); 
Total acres burned: 3,148; 
Total cost: 8,412,000. 

Fire: Pine Fire; 
Date: July 2004; 
IMT type[A]: 1; 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Federal: 4,180 (24); 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Nonfederal: 13,238 (76); 
Total acres burned: 17,418; 
Total cost: 13,311,000. 

State/: Colorado; 

Fire: Mason Gulch Fire; 
Date: July 2005; 
IMT type[A]: 1; 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Federal: 9,124 (80); 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Nonfederal: 2,233 (20); 
Total acres burned: 11,357; 
Total cost: 7,054,000. 

Fire: McGruder Fire; 
Date: July 2004; 
IMT type[A]: 2; 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Federal: 1,404 (50); 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Nonfederal: 1,402 (50); 
Total acres burned: 2,806; 
Total cost: 805,000. 

State: Utah; 

Fire: Blue Springs Fire; 
Date: June-July 2005; 
IMT type[A]: 2; 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Federal: 10,331 (84); 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Nonfederal: 1,955 (16); 
Total acres burned: 12,286; 
Total cost: 3,497,000. 

Fire: Sunrise Complex; 
Date: July 2005; 
IMT type[A]: 2; 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Federal: 18,186 (85); 
Number of acres burned (percentage of total): Nonfederal: 3,272 (15); 
Total acres burned: 21,458; 
Total cost: 2,043,000. 

Source: GAO analysis of data from the Forest Service and the Department 
of the Interior. 

[A] Incident management teams (IMT) are assigned to manage wildland 
fire suppression efforts on the basis of fire size and complexity. Type 
1 IMTs typically handle the most complex fires. The IMTs listed in the 
table represent the IMT type on each fire during its peak size and 
complexity. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Comments from the USDA Forest Service: 

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix. 

USDA: 
United States Department of Agriculture: 
Forest Service

Washington Office: 
1400 Independence Avenue, SW: 
Washington, DC 20250: 

File Code: 1420/1310/1930: 

Date: APR 18 2006: 

Ms. Robin Nazzaro: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N. W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Nazzaro: 

Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on the draft 
Government Accountability Office (GAO) report, GAO-06-570, "Wildland 
Fire Suppression: Lack of Clear Guidance Raises Concerns about Cost 
Sharing among Federal and Nonfederal Entities." The Forest Service 
generally agrees with the findings and recommendations in the report 
and believes that GAO accurately highlighted some of the complexities 
associated with large, multi jurisdictional wildland fires. 

There are a few points that the Forest Service would like to see 
clarified. 

* The heading "Unclear Guidance and Inconsistent Application of Cost- 
Sharing Method Can Be Costly for Entities Involved" seems to imply that 
clearer guidance and consistent application of cost share methods would 
result in reduced wildland fire costs. However, the question is reduced 
costs for whom? Wildland fires in the urban interface are expensive 
regardless of the cost sharing methods used. We suggest the following 
modification "Unclear Guidance and Inconsistent Applications of Cost- 
Sharing Method Can Lead to an Inequitable Apportionment of Costs." 

* Under the heading "Cost-Sharing Method Used Could Lead to 
Significantly Different Financial Outcomes", the report states that 
"For two other fires we reviewed in which federal and nonfederal 
entities had agreed to use the acres-burned method, nonfederal entities 
might have borne a greater proportion of the costs had a different cost-
sharing method been used". This statement seems to imply that the 
Forest Service should choose the cost-sharing method that results in 
the states paying a greater share. 

The report recommends that the Secretaries, working with relevant state 
agencies, provide more specific guidance as to when particular cost- 
sharing methods should be used and clarify the financial 
responsibilities for fires that burn or threaten to burn across 
multiple jurisdictions. The Forest Service will clarify the guidance to 
the field regarding the most appropriate cost-share method to use in a 
given situation. This guidance will serve as a place to begin 
negotiations with our partners. The final cost-sharing method chosen 
will take into account a multitude of factors that will be determined 
at the incident. The Forest Service's financial responsibilities are 
clearly defined in our policy. Reiteration of these financial 
responsibilities will occur as Master Fire Agreements with states are 
updated. 

If you have any additional questions or concerns, please contact the 
Forest Service audit lead, Sandra Cantler, Fire and Aviation 
Management, at 202-205-1438, or Sandy T. Coleman, Assistant Director 
for GAO/OIG Audit Liaison staff, at 703-605-4699. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Dale N. Bosworth: 
Chief: 

cc: Sandra Cantler, Jesse L King, Sandy T Coleman, Clarice Wesley: 

The following are GAO's comments on the USDA Forest Service's letter 
dated April 18, 2006. 

GAO Comments: 

1. We modified the language of our report to clarify that the cost- 
sharing method chosen can have significant financial consequences for 
the entities responsible for providing fire protection to the lands 
involved. Although we agree that fires affecting the wildland-urban 
interface may be costly, regardless of the method used, it is precisely 
these high costs that make it critical for federal and nonfederal 
entities to agree on appropriate cost-sharing methods. 

2. We modified the language of our report to clarify that for the two 
fires discussed, nonfederal entities would likely have borne a greater 
proportion of the costs if another cost-sharing method had been used 
that better recognized the many aviation and ground firefighting assets 
that went toward protecting nonfederal lands and resources. We are not 
implying that costs should be shifted to the state or nonfederal 
entities without any basis. Rather, federal and nonfederal partners 
need to agree on cost-sharing methods that appropriately distribute 
wildland fire suppression costs on the basis of the federal and 
nonfederal lands and resources requiring fire protection and the extent 
of firefighting assets used to protect each. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Department of the Interior: 

United States Department of the Interior: 

Office Of The Assistant Secretary: 
Policy, Management And Budget: 
Washington, D.C. 20240: 

Ms. Robin Nazzaro: 
Natural Resources and Environment: 
United States General Accounting Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

April 27, 2006: 

Dear Ms. Nazarro: 

Thank you for giving us the opportunity to review the draft report, 
Wildland Fire Suppression: Lack of Clear Guidance Raises Concerns about 
Cost Sharing among Federal and Nonfederal Entities (GAO-06-570). We 
agree with the fundamental premise of the report that there is a need 
for more guidance as to when particular cost sharing methods should be 
used to clarify an entity's financial responsibilities. 

The report recommends that the Secretaries of Interior and Agriculture, 
working with relevant state agencies, provide more specific guidance as 
to when particular cost-sharing methods should be used and clarify the 
financial responsibilities for fires that burn or threaten to burn 
across multiple jurisdictions. The Department of the Interior will work 
closely with the Forest Service and state agencies to clarify guidance 
to the field regarding the most appropriate cost-share method to use in 
a given situation. 

In addition, as pointed out in the report, the capacity to correctly 
share wildland fire suppression cost incurred by the Federal Government 
(Forest Service, Department of the Interior, and Federal Emergency 
Management Agency (FEMA)) with nonfederal entities may be challenged by 
the competing Federal statutes and policies, such as FEMA's 
reimbursement of nonfederal entities in certain cases. We have seen 
this issue arise several times already this year when states, affected 
by the early fire season, requested and then released Federal 
firefighting resources seemingly based solely on whether or not a 
Federal reimbursement was available. 

In closing, I would like to express my appreciation for a balanced and 
thorough examination of the issues surrounding cost sharing among 
Federal and nonfederal entities. The Department of the Interior will 
use this report as a point of reference as we deal with cost sharing 
issues in the future. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

R. Thomas Weimer: 
Assistant Secretary: 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Comments from the National Association of State Foresters: 

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix. 

2006 Executive Committee: 
President James B. Hull Texas: 
Vice President E. Austin Short Delaware: 
Treasurer Kirk Rowdabaugh Arizona: 
Northeastern Representative John Dorka Ohio: 
Western Representative David T. Limtiaco Guam: 
Southern Representative Steven G. Scott Tennessee: 
Immediate Past President Pat McElroy Washington: 
Executive Director: Anne E. Heissenbuttel: 

National Association Of State Foresters: 
444 North Capitol Street, NW, Suite 540, Washington, DC 20001: 

May 5, 2006: 

Robin M. Nazzaro: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW Room 2T43: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Nazzaro: 

On behalf of the National Association of State Foresters (NASF), I 
would like to thank you very much for providing us the opportunity to 
meet with you and other GAO staff earlier this week. Our delegation 
greatly appreciated the chance to review and offer our views on the 
findings and recommendations in your draft report, "Wildland Fire 
Suppression: Lack of Clear Guidance Raises Concerns about Cost Sharing 
among Federal and Nonfederal Entities". We recognize that this 
opportunity was unusual for a nonfederal organization. The cooperative 
federal-state partnership is essential to effective and efficient 
wildland fire suppression, and we took our assignment very seriously. 

During the discussion our delegation offered a number of suggestions 
and observations regarding the report. They included identifying minor 
factual errors, suggestions for clarifying certain points, and 
providing additional background on others. We hope that you found our 
suggestions to be both informative and helpful, and that they will lead 
to adjustments in your final report. I will not repeat them in this 
correspondence. 

As our delegation indicated during their meeting with you, NASF also 
wishes to formally respond to your recommendation for executive action, 
which reads: "To strengthen the framework for sharing wildland fire 
suppression costs, GAO recommends that the Secretaries of Agriculture 
and the Interior, working in conjunction with relevant state entities, 
provide more specific guidance as to when particular cost-sharing 
methods should be used and clarify the financial responsibilities for 
suppressing fires that burn or threaten to burn across multiple 
jurisdictions." (Emphasis added.) 

First, in regard to providing more specific guidance on using cost- 
share methods, Anne E. Heissenbuttel we believe that the national 
template for Master Cooperative Agreements currently being developed by 
the National Fire and Aviation Executive Board will provide appropriate 
guidance for cost-share agreements. As your report notes, this draft 
template identifies the requirement for a cost-share agreement and 
defines the various options available to Line Officers. Although the 
guidance in the template is not definitive regarding which option to 
use under any specific set of circumstances, it provides the necessary 
flexibility needed by Line Officers to effectively address local 
variability in terms of terrain, fuels, values at risk, and local 
protection responsibilities. We believe that further efforts to define 
the specific circumstances that would warrant the selection of one cost-
share method over another, or identify the point at which a fire 
crosses some arbitrary threshold, will neither be productive nor 
helpful. Federal and state Line Officers need the flexibility to 
jointly craft cost-share agreements appropriate to the complexity of 
the incident, not attempt to apply rigid, national guidelines that may 
not fit their local circumstances. 

Second, we strongly believe that it is not the responsibility of the 
Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior to "clarify financial 
responsibilities for suppressing fires that burn or threaten to burn 
across multiple jurisdictions". The Secretaries clearly have the 
responsibility to clarify federal responsibilities on federal lands 
which, in fact, they have done. The 1995 Federal Wildland Fire Policy, 
as revised in 2001, accurately defines federal fire protection 
responsibilities, including operations in the wildland-urban interface. 
We believe that federal responsibilities on federal lands are clear: 
federal agencies have an obligation to keep fires originating on their 
lands from spreading off federal lands to other ownerships. On the 
other hand, it is the responsibility of state and local government to 
define their financial obligations through state law and local 
ordinances and codes. And, as states are independent entities, their 
laws, ordinances and codes are frequently different from state to 
state. Therefore, we believe that it is neither feasible nor 
appropriate to attempt to define at the national level the financial 
responsibilities for suppressing wildfires that burn across 
federal/nonfederal jurisdictional boundaries. Federal agencies must 
recognize that differences in state laws require that financial 
decisions on sharing suppression costs must be determined on a state- 
by-state basis. 

Thank you again for the opportunity to review the draft and provide our 
comments for your consideration prior to completion of the final 
report. Our delegation members express their appreciation for your 
patience and courtesy. Please contact Jeff Jahnke, chair of our Forest 
Fire Protection Committee, if you have any questions on our comments or 
need any clarification. Jeff can be reached at the Colorado Forest 
Service at 970/491-6303, or by email at jjahnke@lamar.colostate.edu. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

James B. Hull: 
President: 

CC: Jeff Jahnke (CO), Chair, NASF Fire Committee: 
Kirk Rowdabaugh (AZ), Treasurer, NASF: 
Don Artley, NASF Fire Director: 
Anne Heissenbuttel, NASF Executive Director: 

The following are GAO's comments on NASF's letter dated May 5, 2006. 

GAO Comments: 

1. NASF stated that it believes that the national template currently 
being developed for master cooperative agreements will provide 
appropriate guidance for cost-sharing agreements. As NASF noted, the 
draft template lists several options for sharing suppression costs but 
does not provide definitive guidance as to when each cost-sharing 
method should be used. NASF stated that it does not believe that 
further efforts to define the specific circumstances that would warrant 
the selection of one cost-sharing method over another would be either 
productive or helpful. We continue to believe that more specific 
guidance--which could consider local characteristics and conditions-- 
would assist local federal and nonfederal officials in negotiating cost-
sharing agreements for individual fires. Without such guidance, 
inconsistencies in how costs are shared are likely to continue, along 
with perceived inequities within and among states. 

2. NASF strongly believes that it is not the responsibility of the 
Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior to clarify the financial 
responsibilities for suppressing fires that burn or threaten to burn 
across multiple jurisdictions. We agree with NASF that the Secretaries 
alone cannot clarify these responsibilities, and for that reason, we 
recommended that the Secretaries do so in conjunction with relevant 
state entities. Further, NASF stated that it is neither feasible nor 
appropriate to attempt to define at the national level the financial 
responsibilities for these fires. Ultimately, however, one or more 
entities will end up paying for the costs of fighting a particular 
fire, whether by explicit agreement beforehand or by negotiation 
afterward. To avert decision making after the fact, we maintain that 
federal and nonfederal entities--which have developed an effective 
cooperative firefighting relationship--need to further clarify their 
respective financial responsibilities in guidance articulated in 
advance of the fire season. 

In addition to written comments, NASF also commented orally about two 
other issues discussed in our report. First, NASF officials expressed 
concern about our example illustrating the influence of FEMA assistance 
on the selection of a cost-sharing method for a particular fire. They 
said that, in their experience, the availability of FEMA assistance 
does not influence a state's willingness to use certain cost-sharing 
methods, some of which may lead states to pay higher costs. Although we 
did not attempt to determine how often the availability of FEMA 
assistance affected a state's choice of cost-sharing method, we believe 
that our example illustrates how, without specific guidance, costs for 
similar fires have been shared in different ways. In its written 
comments, Interior also raised a related concern about federal 
assistance such as FEMA's. Interior commented that it has already seen 
the issue arise several times this year, when states have requested, 
then canceled, federal firefighting resources seemingly on the sole 
basis of whether federal reimbursement was available. Second, with 
regard to state and local governments' incentives for protecting the 
wildland-urban interface, NASF officials said that reducing the 
potential loss of life and property provides sufficient incentive for 
state and local governments to adopt laws requiring the use of 
protective measures against wildland fire. As we noted here and in a 
previous report, however, many jurisdictions at risk from wildland fire 
have not yet adopted such laws. We have incorporated other NASF 
comments into our report as appropriate. 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Robin M. Nazzaro (202) 512-3841 or nazzaror@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, David P. Bixler, Assistant 
Director; Ellen W. Chu; Jonathan Dent; Janet Frisch; Timothy Guinane; 
Kevin Jackson; Richard Johnson; Chester Joy; Winchee Lin; Tom 
Moscovitch; and Jena Sinkfield made key contributions to this report. 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] The four agencies within the Department of the Interior responsible 
for wildland firefighting are the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of 
Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, and National Park Service. 

[2] These 12 states were Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, 
Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. 
Although wildland fires can affect all states, we selected these 
western states because they have substantial federal lands and often 
experience wildland fires. 

[3] The 12 master agreements reviewed, 4 states visited, and two 
wildland fires reviewed within each visited state are all 
nonprobability samples. Therefore, the results from these samples 
cannot be used to make inferences about all master agreements, states, 
or wildland fires. 

[4] These dollars have been adjusted for inflation using the gross 
domestic product price index, with fiscal year 2005 as the base year. 

[5] Susan Stewart et al., Mapping the Wildland Urban Interface and 
Projecting Its Growth to 2030: Summary Statistics, January 2005, 
http://www.silvis.forest.wisc.edu/Library/Stats/uswuistats.pdf 
(downloaded May 5, 2006). 

[6] Cooperative fire protection agreements for the Forest Service are 
executed principally under the following five laws: The Granger-Thye 
Act of 1950, the Reciprocal Fire Protection Act of 1955, the 
Cooperative Funds and Deposits Act of 1975, the Cooperative Funds Act 
of 1914, and the Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act of 1978, as 
amended. Cooperative fire protection agreements involving Department of 
the Interior agencies are executed, among other authorities, under the 
Reciprocal Fire Protection Act of 1955. 

[7] National Wildfire Coordinating Group, Interagency Incident Business 
Management Handbook (Boise, Id.: 2004). 

[8] According to the Interagency Incident Business Management Handbook, 
an acres-burned method should be used when entities’ responsibilities, 
objectives, and suppression costs are similar. The handbook also lists 
a fourth method, which addresses sharing costs for a fire controlled 
during initial fire suppression efforts. This fourth method did not 
apply to our study because none of the fires we reviewed were 
controlled during the initial “attack” period. 

[9] Direct costs include the costs for firefighters, aircraft, and 
equipment deployed to fight the fire. Indirect costs include the costs 
for fire managers, fire camps, and other support services. 

[10] The various documents making up the National Fire Plan include (1) 
a September 2000 report from the Secretaries of Agriculture and the 
Interior to the President in response to the wildland fires of 2000, 
(2) congressional direction accompanying substantial new appropriations 
in fiscal year 2001, and (3) several strategies to implement all or 
parts of the plan. For a description of these strategy documents, 
including the National Fire Plan, and their contents, goals, and 
relationships to one another, see GAO, Severe Wildland Fires: 
Leadership and Accountability Needed to Reduce Risks to Communities and 
Resources, GAO 02 259 (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 31, 2002). 

[11] Instead of having a separate master agreement for each state, 
federal and state officials in Oregon and Washington developed a joint 
master agreement for fire protection in both states. 

[12] Under its Fire Management Assistance Grant Program, FEMA provides 
financial assistance to nonfederal entities for the mitigation, 
management, and control of any fire on public or private forest land or 
grassland that would constitute a major disaster. Under this program, 
nonfederal entities can be reimbursed for 75 percent of the allowable 
fire suppression costs. FEMA evaluates the threat posed by a fire or 
fire complex according to the following criteria: (1) threat to lives 
and improved property, including threats to critical 
facilities/infrastructure, and critical watershed areas; (2) 
availability of state and local firefighting resources; (3) high fire 
danger conditions, as indicated by nationally accepted indexes such as 
the national fire danger ratings system; and (4) potential major 
economic impact. 

[13] Specifically, the state forester said that under Arizona law, the 
state had no responsibility to protect the private lands and resources 
in the wildland-urban interface threatened by the Florida Fire because 
the fire did not threaten state lands, and the private properties that 
the fire threatened were not covered by cooperative fire agreements 
with the state. 

[14] These principles were adopted in 2005, but the basic framework 
contained in the principles was also used for the McGruder Fire in 
2004. For the McGruder Fire, however, equal sharing of aviation costs 
was not limited to 72 hours. 

[15] The 72-hour count generally begins after a fire escapes initial 
suppression efforts, or initial attack. 

[16] The National Fire and Aviation Executive Board is made up of the 
fire directors from the five federal land management agencies and a 
representative from NASF. The board reports to the Wildland Fire 
Leadership Council, which is a group established to support the 
implementation and coordination of the National Fire Plan and the 
federal wildland fire management policy. 

[17] The draft template was very similar to the joint master agreement 
for Oregon and Washington. The template described several cost-sharing 
methods that can be used, but it did not specify that certain methods 
be used for certain types of fires. 

[18] Some states have provisions whereby wildland fires exceeding the 
logistic and financial capabilities of local entities can be managed 
and paid for by the state, but officials said that state funds to do so 
are also limited. 

[19] GAO, Technology Assessment: Protecting Structures and Improving 
Communications during Wildland Fires, GAO 05 380 (Washington, D.C.: 
Apr. 26, 2005). 

[20] The Firewise Communities program is the primary national effort to 
educate homeowners about wildland fire risks. The program is jointly 
sponsored by the International Association of Fire Chiefs, National 
Emergency Management Association, National Association of State Fire 
Marshals, NASF, National Fire Protection Association, FEMA, U.S. Fire 
Administration, Forest Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of 
Land Management, Fish and Wildlife Service, and National Park Service. 
Numerous state and local fire and forestry officials also participate 
in this program. See http://www.firewise.org/ for more information. 

[21] Western Governors’ Association, “Letter to the Secretary of 
Agriculture and Secretary of the Interior,” December 16, 2004, 
[Hyperlink, http://www.westgov.org/wga/initiatives/fire/tempe-
report04.pdf] (downloaded May 8, 2006). 

[22] Colorado State Forest Service, State of Colorado Wildfire Hazard 
Mitigation Plan, Colorado Multi-Hazards Mitigation Plan (Denver, Colo.: 
July 2002). 

[23] Department of the Interior, Department of Agriculture, Department 
of Energy, Department of Defense, Department of Commerce, Environmental 
Protection Agency, Federal Emergency Management Agency, and the 
National Association of State Foresters, Review and Update of the 1995 
Federal Wildland Fire Management Policy (Washington, D.C.: January 
2001). 

[24] GAO has previously reported on fuel conditions on federal lands. 
See GAO, Wildland Fire Management: Update on Federal Agency Efforts to 
Develop a Cohesive Strategy to Address Wildland Fire Threats, GAO 06 
671R (Washington, D.C.: May 1, 2006); 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); and 
Western National Forests: A Cohesive Strategy Is Needed to Address 
Catastrophic Wildfire Threats, GAO/RCED 99 65 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 
2, 1999). 

[25] Department of Agriculture, Secretary of Agriculture Independent 
Cost-Control Review Panel: FY 2004 Large Cost Wildfires Report 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 23, 2005); and Department of Agriculture and 
Department of the Interior, Consolidation of the 2003 National and 
Regional Large Incident Strategic Assessment and Oversight Review Key 
Findings (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 22, 2003). 

[26] These states were Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, 
Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. 

[27] Of the federal firefighting agencies, the Forest Service and the 
Bureau of Land Management spend the most funds each year on wildland 
fire suppression. 

[28] GAO, Technology Assessment: Protecting Structures and Improving 
Communications during Wildland Fires, GAO 05 380 (Washington, D.C.: 
Apr. 26, 2005). 

[29] James Schwab et al., Planning for Wildfires (Washington, D.C.: 
American Planning Association, 2005). 

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