National Interagency Coordination Center 0530 MT National ...

National Interagency Coordination Center Incident Management Situation Report Friday, February 11, 2022 ? 0730 MDT National Preparedness Level 1

National Fire Activity (February 4 ? February 10, 2022):

Initial attack activity:

Light (475 fires)

New large incidents:

4

Large fires contained:

15

Uncontained large fires: ***

0

Area Command teams committed:

0

NIMOs committed:

0

Type 1 IMTs committed:

0

Type 2 IMTs committed:

0

Nationally, there are 0 fires being managed under a strategy other than full suppression. ***Uncontained large fires include only fires being managed under a full suppression strategy.

Link to Geographic Area daily reports.

Link to Understanding the IMSR.

This report will post every Friday at 0730 Mountain time unless significant activity occurs.

GACC

AICC NWCC ONCC OSCC NRCC GBCC SWCC RMCC EACC SACC Total

Incidents

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 6 9

Active Incident Resource Summary

Cumulative Acres

Crews

Engines

Helicopters

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

145

4

82

5

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

615

0

12

0

0

0

0

0

2,126

0

20

0

2,887

4

114

5

Total Personnel

0 0 0 499 0 0 0 32 0 56 587

Change in Personnel

0 0 0 466 0 0 0 32 0 -145 353

Southern Area (PL 2)

New fires:

368

New large incidents:

3

Uncontained large fires:

0

Incident Name

Unit

Size Acres Chge

%

Ctn/ Comp

Est

Personnel

Resources

Strc

Total Chge Crw Eng Heli Lost

$$ CTD

Beans

OK-OMA 274

0 100 Ctn

---

13

0

0

5

0

0

40K

Bucks 2

OK-OMA 186

0 100 Ctn

---

14

0

0

2

0

0

30K

OK Heiberger

AL-ALF

355

146 100 Ctn

---

4

-2

0 0 0 0

25K

Mill Creek

OK-OMA 245

0 100 Ctn

---

4

0

0

0

0

0

15K

* Gator

Salt Creek Landing

Albright

FL-EAQ 461

--- 100 Ctn

---

8

---

0 4 0 0

10K

OK-OKS 300

0 100 Ctn

---

1

-15 0 1 0 0

3K

OK-OKS 448

0 100 Ctn

---

5

0

0 2 0 0

3K

Limestone

OK-OKS 200

0 100 Ctn

---

2

0

0 1 0 0

3K

Gaia

OK-OKS 118

0 100 Ctn

---

2

Pigeon Creek Ridge

OK-OKS

102

2 100 Ctn

---

5

White Rock

OK-OKS 200

100 100 Ctn

---

10

0

0 1 0 0

2K

0

0 3 0 0

2K

0

0 5 0 0

1K

Smallwood

OK-OKS 215

0 100 Ctn

---

4

0

0 2 0 0

1K

* Taylor Creek TX-TXS 700

--- 100 Ctn

---

6

* Palo Pinto Complex

TX-TXS 596

--- 100 Ctn

---

17

OMA ? Okmulgee Field Office, BIA ALF ? National Forests in Alabama, USFS

TXS ? Texas A & M Forest Service

---

0 0 0 0

NR

---

0 2 0 0

NR

EAQ ? Eglin AFB OKS ? Oklahoma DOF

Origin Own BIA BIA FS BIA DOD

ST

ST ST ST

ST

ST ST PRI

PRI

Rocky Mountain Area (PL 1)

New fires:

5

New large incidents:

1

Uncontained large fires:

0

Incident Name

Unit

Size Acres Chge

%

Ctn/ Comp

Est

* 44 CA

SD-SDS 430

--- 100 Ctn

---

SDS ? South Dakota Wildland Fire Suppression

Personnel

Total Chge

1

---

Resources

Strc

Crw Eng Heli Lost

0 0 0 0

$$ CTD

25K

Origin Own

ST

Area

Fires and Acres (February 4 ? February 10, 2022) (by Protection):

BIA

BLM

FWS

NPS ST/OT USFS

Alaska Area

FIRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

ACRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

Northwest Area

FIRES

0

0

0

0

0

1

ACRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

FIRES

0

0

0

0

32

2

Northern California Area

ACRES

0

0

0

0

6

0

FIRES

1

0

0

0

45

9

Southern California Area

ACRES

0

0

0

0

7

1

FIRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

Northern Rockies Area

ACRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

Great Basin Area

FIRES

0

2

0

0

2

1

ACRES

0

27

0

0

7

0

Southwest Area

FIRES

5

2

0

0

0

0

ACRES

81

2

0

0

0

0

FIRES

0

0

0

0

4

1

Rocky Mountain Area

ACRES

0

0

0

0

152

293

Eastern Area

FIRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

ACRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

Southern Area

FIRES

16

0

0

0

345

7

ACRES 549

0

0

0

6,543

174

TOTAL FIRES:

22

4

0

0

428

21

TOTAL ACRES:

630

29

0

0

6,715

469

TOTAL 0 0 1 0 34 6 55 8 0 0 5 34 7 83 5

445 0 0

368 7,265 475 7,842

Fires and Acres Year-to-Date (by Protection):

Area

BIA

BLM

FWS

NPS

ST/OT

Alaska Area

FIRES

0

0

ACRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Northwest Area

FIRES

1

0

ACRES

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

1

FIRES

0

0

Northern California Area

ACRES

0

0

0

0

89

0

0

33

FIRES

1

2

Southern California Area

ACRES

0

0

0

0

165

0

0

716

FIRES

0

0

Northern Rockies Area

ACRES

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Great Basin Area

FIRES

0

3

2

0

8

ACRES

0

27

0

0

118

Southwest Area

FIRES

10

11

0

0

18

ACRES 62

71

0

0

571

FIRES

15

1

2

0

13

Rocky Mountain Area

ACRES 25

0

15

0

764

Eastern Area

FIRES

0

0

ACRES

0

0

0

0

40

0

0

43

Southern Area

FIRES

146

1

5

6

2,451

ACRES 3,405

3

2,139

105

39,288

TOTAL FIRES:

173

18

9

6

2,785

TOTAL ACRES:

3,492

101

2,154

105

41,535

USFS 0 0 1 11 2 0 28 6 1 0 1 0 4 14 3

294 8

105 81 6,351 129 6,781

TOTAL 0 0 3 12 91 33

196 722

1 0 14 145 43 718 34 1,098 48 148 2,690 51,293 3,120 54,170

Ten Year Average Fires (2011 ? 2020 as of today) Ten Year Average Acres (2011 ? 2020 as of today)

2,529 50,683

***Changes in some agency YTD acres reflect more accurate mapping or reporting adjustments. ***Additional wildfire information is available through the Geographic Areas at

Predictive Services Discussion: Above normal temperatures are forecast to continue across much of the West into the weekend. Breezy and dry conditions are expected across the central and southern Plains at times today through Monday with local critical conditions possible. Breezy and dry conditions are also possible across Georgia into north Florida on Sunday. Winds are forecast to increase across the central and southern Plains Tuesday into Wednesday next week with elevated to critical conditions possible across the High Plains.

Low pressure will bring mixed precipitation to the Great Lakes and Northeast today into Saturday with light rain across the Ohio River Valley into the Mid-Atlantic. A weak Pacific storm is forecast to affect the West early next week with light valley rain and mountain snow from the coast through the Intermountain West. The storm is forecast to strengthen as it moves into the Southwest and southern Plains midweek with widespread rain possible for the central and southern Plains. The storm may bring heavy rain and strong thunderstorms late in the week from east Texas and Oklahoma north and east through the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valley into the Ohio River Valley and southern Great Lakes.



Fire Not Scouted and Sized Up

Operational Engagement Category

Before taking action on the fire, address the following:

? Can you personally observe the fire or should you use scouts? o Describe ways you can scout and size up a fire.

? Do you know the location of the fire perimeter? o Discuss situations when the fire perimeter may not be obvious (unburned sections due to spot fires, etc.).

? Do you know the direction of fire spread? When isn't the direction of fire spread obvious (wind shifts, spot fires, etc.)?

? Does the direction of fire spread increase risk? o Talk about situations where you may have to approach the head of the fire (hiking down from a helispot, approaching from an existing road, erratic winds, etc.).

? Do you know the fuels and their condition? What kind of information will you assume from what you already know about fuel types (spot fires in fir, extreme fire potential in flashy fuels, etc.)?

? What information can aerial resources provide about the fire? ? Do topographic hazards exist? What can you assume from the kind of terrain near and within the

fire perimeter (slope, chimneys, aspect, etc.)? ? Does enough information exist to establish a plan of attack? When do you have enough

information to begin fighting fire? What do you need to know? ? Do other dangers exist? Have you talked about factors specific to the work area (hunters in the

vicinity, drought conditions, snag patches, etc.)? To reduce the risks:

? Post lookouts until the fire is sized up and escape routes and safety zones are established. ? Retreat if the situation is too complex. Review fires where you had to wait until your assigned

area of the fire was scouted and sized up before you were allowed onto the fireline.

Resources: Incident Response Pocket Guide (IRPG), PMS 461 Interagency Standards for Fire and Fire Aviation Operations (Red Book) 10 Standard Firefighting Orders, PMS 110 18 Watch Out Situations, PMS 118 10 and 18 Poster, PMS 110-18

Have an idea? Have feedback? Share it.

EMAIL | Facebook | MAIL: 6 Minutes for Safety Subcommittee ? 3833 S. Development Ave ? Boise, ID 83705 | FAX: 208-387-5250

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