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Gov. Kate Brown Requests Emergency Declaration for Oregon

The declaration would allow Oregon to partner with FEMA to provide power emergency generation, communications, evacuation support, debris removal and prepare for future fires.

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High-voltage overhead power lines buzz in smoke filled air in Clackamas County, Ore., Saturday, Sept. 10, 2022. Strong winds fanned a fire burning at Milo McIver State Park in Estacada, Ore., on Friday. The winds continued into Saturday, Sept. 10, 2022.
Mark Graves/TNS
(TNS) - Gov. Kate Brown has asked President Joe Biden to approve an emergency declaration for Oregon due to the extreme wildfire conditions as over 270,000 acres burn.

If approved, the declaration would allow the state to access federal funds for wildfire response and preparation, said Bobbi Doan, a spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Emergency Management. This would include the cost of deploying firefighters and creating evacuation sites. Had the declaration been approved before the strong winds shut off power in many areas of Oregon last week, the state could have requested emergency power generators, Doan said.

Brown made her request Sept. 9, one day after warning the state of dangerous weather conditions that weekend. In it, she described the extreme drought the state has been facing since March, and the red flag weather conditions – hot, dry winds and low humidities – seen over the weekend that prompted power shutoffs to around 50,000 people.

Brown wrote that the severity of the conditions and rapid growth of the number of wildfires would expand beyond the state and stress local government’s capabilities. The declaration would allow Oregon to partner with the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide power emergency generation, communications, evacuation support, debris removal and prepare for future fires.

Brown specifically requested assistance in debris removal and emergency protective measures.

If approved, Oregon would be the first state to receive federal assistance for wildfires under the 1988 Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act.

“Oregon would be the first,” Brown said in a statement Wednesday, " but unfortunately, certainly not the last to need this important assistance.”

While evacuation orders are being lifted for many of Oregon’s large wildfires, including the Double Creek fire that spans over 150,000 acres, the state’s fire season is not over yet.

“We still have several weeks of peak fire season ahead of us, five large active fires, and 274,000 acres burning statewide,” Brown said in the statement.

– Austin De Dios; adedios@oregonian.com; @austindedios; (503) 319-9744

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