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TwitterThis map contains live feed sources for US current wildfire locations and perimeters, VIIRS and MODIS hot spots, wildfire conditions / red flag warnings, and wildfire potential. Each of these layers provides insight into where a fire is located, its intensity and the surrounding areas susceptibility to wildfire. Find out more about the Esri Disaster Response Program: www.esri.com/disaster About the Data: Click on the links in the LAYERS section for details about each layer Wildfire: This displays large active fire incidents and situation reports that have been entered into the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) database by local emergency response teams. The final official perimeter should be obtained from the host unit, which can be determined by looking at the Unit Id for any specific fire. The host unit is responsible for producing official and final perimeters for all incidents in their jurisdiction.Hot Spot: The MODIS and VIIRS thermal layers are created from the MODIS satellite detection system and represents hot spots that could be potential fire locations in the last 24 hour period at a horizontal resolution of 1 km and temporal resolution of 1 to 2 days. Wind Data (NOAA METAR): Typical METAR contains data for the temperature, dew point, wind speed and direction, precipitation, cloud cover and heights, visibility, and barometric pressure. A METAR may also contain information on precipitation amounts, lightning, and other information. Red Flag Warnings: Filtered from the Weather Watches and Warnings layer.
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TwitterThe Geospatial Multi-Agency Coordination Group, or GeoMAC, is an internet-based mapping tool originally designed for fire managers to access online maps of current fire locations and perimeters in the continental United States, including Alaska.Active wildfires can be viewed in the USA Wildfire Activity Layer. Additional information about how to use fire perimeter data can be found in several blog posts:Learning about the Thomas Fire using ArcGIS Online and Living Atlas by Bern Szukalski Mapping the Inferno by Dan PisutFurther information about this data can be found here. All of these layers can be found in a corresponding web map which can be copied for customization. The layers in this map can be geoenriched with demographics or used in spatial analysis.Disclaimer: Wildland fire perimeters are submitted to GeoMAC by the incidents and then posted to the GeoMAC site for downloading. While every effort is made to provide accurate and complete information, there may be gaps in daily coverage. Please note: Files only contain perimeter data as they are submitted by the incidents. Files do not contain all fires. This data are not the authoritative fire perimeter data and should not be used as such.
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This layer contains the fire perimeters from the previous calendar year, and those dating back to 1878, for California. Perimeters are sourced from the Fire and Resource Assessment Program (FRAP) and are updated shortly after the end of each calendar year. Information below is from the FRAP web site. There is also a tile cache version of this layer.
About the Perimeters in this Layer
Initially CAL FIRE and the USDA Forest Service jointly developed a fire perimeter GIS layer for public and private lands throughout California. The data covered the period 1950 to 2001 and included USFS wildland fires 10 acres and greater, and CAL FIRE fires 300 acres and greater. BLM and NPS joined the effort in 2002, collecting fires 10 acres and greater. Also in 2002, CAL FIRE’s criteria expanded to include timber fires 10 acres and greater in size, brush fires 50 acres and greater in size, grass fires 300 acres and greater in size, wildland fires destroying three or more structures, and wildland fires causing $300,000 or more in damage. As of 2014, the monetary requirement was dropped and the damage requirement is 3 or more habitable structures or commercial structures.
In 1989, CAL FIRE units were requested to fill in gaps in their fire perimeter data as part of the California Fire Plan. FRAP provided each unit with a preliminary map of 1950-89 fire perimeters. Unit personnel also verified the pre-1989 perimeter maps to determine if any fires were missing or should be re-mapped. Each CAL FIRE Unit then generated a list of 300+ acre fires that started since 1989 using the CAL FIRE Emergency Activity Reporting System (EARS). The CAL FIRE personnel used this list to gather post-1989 perimeter maps for digitizing. The final product is a statewide GIS layer spanning the period 1950-1999.
CAL FIRE has completed inventory for the majority of its historical perimeters back to 1950. BLM fire perimeters are complete from 2002 to the present. The USFS has submitted records as far back as 1878. The NPS records date to 1921.
About the Program
FRAP compiles fire perimeters and has established an on-going fire perimeter data capture process. CAL FIRE, the United States Forest Service Region 5, the Bureau of Land Management, and the National Park Service jointly develop the fire perimeter GIS layer for public and private lands throughout California at the end of the calendar year. Upon release, the data is current as of the last calendar year.
The fire perimeter database represents the most complete digital record of fire perimeters in California. However it is still incomplete in many respects. Fire perimeter database users must exercise caution to avoid inaccurate or erroneous conclusions. For more information on potential errors and their source please review the methodology section of these pages.
The fire perimeters database is an Esri ArcGIS file geodatabase with three data layers (feature classes):
There are many uses for fire perimeter data. For example, it is used on incidents to locate recently burned areas that may affect fire behavior (see map left).
Other uses include:
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TwitterThis is a saved copy of the NWS Weather Watches and Warning layer, filtered just for wildfire related warnings.Details from the orginal item:https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=a6134ae01aad44c499d12feec782b386This feature service depicts the National Weather Service (NWS) watches, warnings, and advisories within the United States. Watches and warnings are classified into 43 categories.A warning is issued when a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, imminent or likely. A warning means weather conditions pose a threat to life or property. People in the path of the storm need to take protective action.A watch is used when the risk of a hazardous weather or hydrologic event has increased significantly, but its occurrence, location or timing is still uncertain. It is intended to provide enough lead time so those who need to set their plans in motion can do so. A watch means that hazardous weather is possible. People should have a plan of action in case a storm threatens, and they should listen for later information and possible warnings especially when planning travel or outdoor activities.An advisory is issued when a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, imminent or likely. Advisories are for less serious conditions than warnings, that cause significant inconvenience and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life or property.SourceNational Weather Service RSS-CAP Warnings and Advisories: Public AlertsNational Weather Service Boundary Overlays: AWIPS Shapefile DatabaseUpdate FrequencyThe services is updated every 5 minutes using the Aggregated Live Feeds methodology.The overlay data is checked and updated daily from the official AWIPS Shapefile Database.Area CoveredUnited States and TerritoriesWhat can you do with this layer?Customize the display of each attribute by using the Change Style option for any layer.Query the layer to display only specific types of weather watches and warnings.Add to a map with other weather data layers to provide insight on hazardous weather events.Use ArcGIS Online analysis tools, such as Enrich Data, to determine the potential impact of weather events on populations.This map is provided for informational purposes and is not monitored 24/7 for accuracy and currency.
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This layer contains the fire perimeters from the previous calendar year, and those dating back to 1878, for California. Perimeters are sourced from the Fire and Resource Assessment Program (FRAP) and are updated shortly after the end of each calendar year. Information below is from the FRAP web site. There is also a tile cache version of this layer.About the Perimeters in this LayerInitially CAL FIRE and the USDA Forest Service jointly developed a fire perimeter GIS layer for public and private lands throughout California. The data covered the period 1950 to 2001 and included USFS wildland fires 10 acres and greater, and CAL FIRE fires 300 acres and greater. BLM and NPS joined the effort in 2002, collecting fires 10 acres and greater. Also in 2002, CAL FIRE’s criteria expanded to include timber fires 10 acres and greater in size, brush fires 50 acres and greater in size, grass fires 300 acres and greater in size, wildland fires destroying three or more structures, and wildland fires causing $300,000 or more in damage. As of 2014, the monetary requirement was dropped and the damage requirement is 3 or more habitable structures or commercial structures.In 1989, CAL FIRE units were requested to fill in gaps in their fire perimeter data as part of the California Fire Plan. FRAP provided each unit with a preliminary map of 1950-89 fire perimeters. Unit personnel also verified the pre-1989 perimeter maps to determine if any fires were missing or should be re-mapped. Each CAL FIRE Unit then generated a list of 300+ acre fires that started since 1989 using the CAL FIRE Emergency Activity Reporting System (EARS). The CAL FIRE personnel used this list to gather post-1989 perimeter maps for digitizing. The final product is a statewide GIS layer spanning the period 1950-1999.CAL FIRE has completed inventory for the majority of its historical perimeters back to 1950. BLM fire perimeters are complete from 2002 to the present. The USFS has submitted records as far back as 1878. The NPS records date to 1921.About the ProgramFRAP compiles fire perimeters and has established an on-going fire perimeter data capture process. CAL FIRE, the United States Forest Service Region 5, the Bureau of Land Management, and the National Park Service jointly develop the fire perimeter GIS layer for public and private lands throughout California at the end of the calendar year. Upon release, the data is current as of the last calendar year.The fire perimeter database represents the most complete digital record of fire perimeters in California. However it is still incomplete in many respects. Fire perimeter database users must exercise caution to avoid inaccurate or erroneous conclusions. For more information on potential errors and their source please review the methodology section of these pages.The fire perimeters database is an Esri ArcGIS file geodatabase with three data layers (feature classes):A layer depicting wildfire perimeters from contributing agencies current as of the previous fire year;A layer depicting prescribed fires supplied from contributing agencies current as of the previous fire year;A layer representing non-prescribed fire fuel reduction projects that were initially included in the database. Fuels reduction projects that are non prescribed fire are no longer included.All three are available in this layer. Additionally, you can find related web maps, view layers set up for individual years or decades, and tile layers here.Recommended Uses There are many uses for fire perimeter data. For example, it is used on incidents to locate recently burned areas that may affect fire behavior (see map left).Other uses include:Improving fire prevention, suppression, and initial attack success.Reduce and track hazards and risks in urban interface areas.Provide information for fire ecology studies for example studying fire effects on vegetation over time. Download the Fire Perimeter GIS data hereDownload a statewide map of Fire Perimeters hereSource: Fire and Resource Assessment Program (FRAP)
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Most of the data displayed on this WebMap is near real-time, automatically updating at regular intervals. Web Services used in the webmap: (visit link to learn more about each service) IRWIN - The Integrated Reporting of Wildland-Fire Information (IRWIN) service is an investment intended to enable “end-to-end” fire reporting capability. IRWIN provides data exchange capabilities between existing applications used to manage data related to wildland fire incidents. IRWIN focuses on the goals of reducing redundant data entry, identifying authoritative data sources, and improving the consistency, accuracy, and availability of operational data.IRWIN can be thought of as a central hub that orchestrates data between the various applications. Users continue to utilize existing applications. Data is synchronized between participating applications to ensure the most current data is available in near real time. IRWIN supports conflict detection and resolution on all new wildfire incidents to support a unique record for each incident. NOAA nowCOAST - Provides web services of near real-ti me observations, analyses, tide predictions, model guidance, watches/warnings, and forecasts for the coastal United States by integrating data and information across NOAA, other federal agencies and regional ocean and weather observing systems (source). National Interagency Fire Center (arcgis.com) - Provides web services of Current and Historic Public facing wildland fire data. Created for use in the Natl Significant Wildfire Activity Dashboard. Currently maintained by the DOI, BLM, NOC, Fire Program. Contact BLM_OC_Fire_Geospatial@blm.gov or josterkamp@blm.gov for questions or comments.
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TwitterThis layer is no longer being actively maintained and will be retired by December 2024. Replacement layer here. This layer contains the fire perimeters from 2020 only, for California. Perimeters are sourced from the Fire and Resource Assessment Program (FRAP) and are updated shortly after the end of each calendar year. Information below is from the FRAP web site.About the Perimeters in this LayerInitially CAL FIRE and the USDA Forest Service jointly developed a fire perimeter GIS layer for public and private lands throughout California. The data covered the period 1950 to 2001 and included USFS wildland fires 10 acres and greater, and CAL FIRE fires 300 acres and greater. BLM and NPS joined the effort in 2002, collecting fires 10 acres and greater. Also in 2002, CAL FIRE’s criteria expanded to include timber fires 10 acres and greater in size, brush fires 50 acres and greater in size, grass fires 300 acres and greater in size, wildland fires destroying three or more structures, and wildland fires causing $300,000 or more in damage. As of 2014, the monetary requirement was dropped and the damage requirement is 3 or more habitable structures or commercial structures.In 1989, CAL FIRE units were requested to fill in gaps in their fire perimeter data as part of the California Fire Plan. FRAP provided each unit with a preliminary map of 1950-89 fire perimeters. Unit personnel also verified the pre-1989 perimeter maps to determine if any fires were missing or should be re-mapped. Each CAL FIRE Unit then generated a list of 300+ acre fires that started since 1989 using the CAL FIRE Emergency Activity Reporting System (EARS). The CAL FIRE personnel used this list to gather post-1989 perimeter maps for digitizing. The final product is a statewide GIS layer spanning the period 1950-1999.CAL FIRE has completed inventory for the majority of its historical perimeters back to 1950. BLM fire perimeters are complete from 2002 to the present. The USFS has submitted records as far back as 1878. The NPS records date to 1921.About the ProgramFRAP compiles fire perimeters and has established an on-going fire perimeter data capture process. CAL FIRE, the United States Forest Service Region 5, the Bureau of Land Management, and the National Park Service jointly develop the fire perimeter GIS layer for public and private lands throughout California at the end of the calendar year. Upon release, the data is current as of the last calendar year.The fire perimeter database represents the most complete digital record of fire perimeters in California. However it is still incomplete in many respects. Fire perimeter database users must exercise caution to avoid inaccurate or erroneous conclusions. For more information on potential errors and their source please review the methodology section of these pages.The fire perimeters database is an Esri ArcGIS file geodatabase with three data layers (feature classes):A layer depicting wildfire perimeters from contributing agencies current as of the previous fire year (Burn areas);A layer depicting prescribed fires supplied from contributing agencies current as of the previous fire year (Prescribed burns);A layer representing non-prescribed fire fuel reduction projects that were initially included in the database. Fuels reduction projects that are non prescribed fire are no longer included (Other burns).All three are available in this layer. Additionally, you can find related web maps, view layers set up for individual years or decades, and tile layers here.Recommended UsesThere are many uses for fire perimeter data. For example, it is used on incidents to locate recently burned areas that may affect fire behavior (see map left).Other uses include:Improving fire prevention, suppression, and initial attack success.Reduce and track hazards and risks in urban interface areas.Provide information for fire ecology studies for example studying fire effects on vegetation over time.Download the Fire Perimeter GIS data hereDownload a statewide map of Fire Perimeters hereSource: Fire and Resource Assessment Program (FRAP)
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TwitterThe Fireshed Registry 2.0 Web Map contains all data used in the Fireshed Registry 2.0 ArcGIS Experience Builder application. The Fireshed Registry is a U.S. Forest Service (USFS) application that organizes information about wildfire risk, ecosystem values and community characteristics into geographic landscape containers called firesheds that are used to describe past activity, present conditions, and past and predicted wildfires. The original Fireshed Registry Dashboard application was initially released in 2021 in response to the impacts of the 2020 fire season that prompted wide-ranging policy discussions about the role of active forest management to reduce hazardous fuels on federal and private wildlands (Ager et. al 2021). The Fireshed Registry is the data backbone for the Scenario Investment Planning Platform, which simulates specific investment scenarios and resulting possible outcomes for reducing wildfire transmission to communities. This updated Fireshed Registry 2.0 is a public-facing ArcGIS Online Experience Builder application that presents updated data and information used in the original Fireshed Registry dashboard, but also utilizes data directly from the Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW) where authoritative data published by the USFS is stored. The Fireshed Registry 2.0 also incorporates Expanded Fireshed Exposure Map data layers that were compiled to support identification of potential additional landscapes for focused work under the Wildfire Crisis Strategy (WCS). Utilizing authoritative EDW data allows for more rapidly refreshed and up-to-date data to be incorporated, while data compiled to support identification of additional WCS landscapes allows for the visualization of additional ecological and community values to identify exposure and vulnerability.More information about the Fireshed Registry 2.0 and source data can be found in the Fireshed Registry 2.0 Data Documentation PDF. References:Ager, Alan A.; Day, Michelle A.; Ringo, Chris; Evers, Cody R.; Alcasena, Fermin J.; Houtman, Rachel M.; Scanlon, Michael; Ellersick, Tania. 2021. Development and application of the fireshed registry. Gen. Tech. Rep. RMRS-GTR-425. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. 47 p. https://doi.org/10.2737/RMRS-GTR-425.
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TwitterUSFS Region 01 Mushroom Hunter Helper displays fire history activity from the last two years. The data is not dynamically updated, but updated once every year when previous years fire perimeters become available (usually in March). The underlying base data is a service provide by the Enterprise Data Warehouse and ESRI. For information about this Web Mapping Application and or access to the data, please contact the Northern Region Geospatial Group or your local National Forest.
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TwitterWeb Map of Collaborative Fuels Reduction treatments in the vicinity of Trail Creek Fire Perimeter in the Upper North Fork Salmon River area of the Salmon-Challis National Forest for use in "Prepared for Fire -- When Years of Collaboration Met the Trail Creek Fire" Story map. This map is used in the tour of fire suppression activities and tactics used during the Trail Creek Wildfire of 2021.
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TwitterThese datasets contains geospatial data representing current and future actions that may be funded by the Department of the Interior’s wildland fire management program and completed by Department of the Interior Bureau staff, Tribes, or their partners to treat wildland fuels or vegetative conditions to support wildfire resilience and resistance, community adaptation, and/or public and responder safety by their completion.The incorporation of available historic data is in progress.Warning: Please refrain from repeatedly querying the service using a relative date range. This includes using the “(not) in the last” operators in a Web Map filter and any reference to CURRENT_TIMESTAMP. This type of query puts undue load on the service and may render it temporarily unavailable.Data Dictionary defining Domain Values for treatments and activities: IFPRS Treatment and Activity Attribute Domain Values Logical Data Dictionary organized by User Interface section:**User Interface Section**Field Name : Definition**Context**Treatment ID/Activity ID : System-generated Identifier to uniquely identify an estimated Treatment/Activity Area Polygon.Actual Treatment ID/Actual Activity ID : System-generated identifier to uniquely identify an Actual Treatment/Activity Area Polygon.Is Point (Table Only) : System-generated flag identifying activities that are represented by a point location.Treatment Name/Activity Name : Short title for Treatment or Activity.Local ID : User-entered ID for Treatment or Activity.Class : First Tier, parent grouping to sort and filter actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Category : Mid-level, parent grouping to sort and filter actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Type : Lowest-level, categorization used to classify specific actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Notes : Open text field to provide a brief record of facts related to an activity or treatment.Parent Number : If created from other Treatment or Activity, Parent Treatment or Activity ID is displayed.Is Parent Treatment (Table Only) : Flag indicating that treatment has been copied.Status : Current state for treatment or activity: started, not started, completed, cancelled.Status Reason : Short description of why a treatment or activity was cancelled.Treatment Driver (Table Only) : Pending, BLM only use - not yet in use.Cancelled Date (Table Only) : Date treatment or activity status changed to Cancelled.**Location**Latitude : The center point of the treatment or activity indicated using the angular distance north of the earth's equator.Longitude : The center point of the treatment or activity indicated using the angular distance west of the meridian at Greenwich, England.Is WUI : WUI as defined by the Healthy Forests Restoration Act (HFRA) (Title I, Section 101, Subsection 16).Department : Above Agency in hierarchy.Is Department Manual (Table Only) : System automated, capturing manual update of Department field.Region : Above Unit in hierarchy, Relates to Department, Agencies.Agency : Above Region in hierarchy, Relates to Department. Unit : Lowest in hierarchy, Relates to Agencies, Regions.Congressional District : Area representing electoral divisions for the purpose of electing members of the United States House of Representatives.Tribe Name : Title for one of 574 federally recognized Native American Indian tribes and Alaska Native entities.State : Label associated with State & Territory boundaries.County : Area representing administrative or political subdivisions of a state.Calculated Acres : Measurement of the area estimated to be or actually treated or assessed by a treatment or activity. Calculated from perimeter.Veg Departure Percentage Derived : Percent Vegetation Departure from estimated historical conditions. Used to classify the information into the Vegetation Departure Index and Vegetation Departure Class (VCC) and Fire Regime Condition Class (FRCC). Ranges from 0-100. System-derived; however, user may update if better information is available.Veg Departure Percentage Manual : Percent Vegetation Departure from estimated historical conditions. Used to classify the information into the Vegetation Departure Index and Vegetation Departure Class (VCC) and Fire Regime Condition Class (FRCC). Ranges from 0-100. User update value - required if the mean value returns values such as Agriculture, Ice, Rock, etc.Is Vegetation Departure Manual (Table Only) : System automated, capturing manual update of Vegetation Departure field.**Proposal and Justification**Estimated Success Probability : 25% Treatment objectives are difficult to achieve and/or multiple treatments are likely to be necessary to achieve success. 50% Treatment objectives are moderately difficult to achieve and/or additional treatments are likely to be necessary to achieve success. 75% Treatment objectives are moderately easy to achieve and/or just one additional treatment is likely to be necessary to achieve success. 100% Treatment objectives are easy to achieve and/or this is likely the final treatment necessary to achieve success.Implementation Feasibility : The achievability of a treatment or activity - from very high, high, medium, to low. Low: Substantial resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are lacking and/or major constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. Medium: Some resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are in place and/or some constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. High: All resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are in place, however, some constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. Very High: All resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning, etc.) are in place and few constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion.Estimated Durability : Estimated duration in years (1-300) that treatment will accomplish its purpose. This information supports the understanding of maintenance needs and anticipated effectiveness when intersected by a wildfire.Treatment Priority : Relative priority of a treatment or activity as high, medium, or low. Low: Identified as lower priority by local management. Medium: Identified as moderate priority by local management. High: Identified as top priority by local management.**Costs**WBS : Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) Codes: The WBS code is the part of the DOI account code that allows DOI to track individual projects or undertakings required by laws, regulations, and/or reporting requirements.Funding Source : Wildland Fire Management funding sources: Fuels Management Regular (FMReg), Fuels BIL Admin (FMBILAdmin), Fuels BIL Control Locations (FMBilControlLocations), Fuels BIL Laborers (FMBilLaborers), Fuels BIL Prescribed Fire (FMBilPrescribedFire), Fuels BIL Thinning (FMBilThinning), Fuels BIL Regular (FMBilReg), Fuels Disaster Relief (FMDisasterRelief).Funding Department : Department providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Department.Funding Agency : Agency providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Agency.Funding Region : Region providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Region.Funding Unit : Unit providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location unit.Funding Sub Unit : Sub Unit providing funding for treatment or activity (currently only used for BLM). Does not need to be the same as location Sub Unit.Funding Unit Type : Characterization of units providing funding through staff, contracts, agreements, and equipment purchases: National, Regional, Local, Subunit, Tribal.Funding Tribe : Tribe providing funding for treatment or activity (only representative of tribes implementing a 638 compact or contracted program).Is RTRL : Flag indicating action is part of a Reserved Treaty Rights Lands (RTRL) project.Cost Center (Table Only) : Represents the detailed organizational structure, which captures detailed.Functional Area (Table Only) : Represents the funding level below Fund; e.g., bureau program activity. It defines the objective, function, or mission of the bureau’s major responsibilities, and is used to distribute the budget and track spending and revenue. This field is also used to capture the bureau Activity Based Costing (ABC) code.Unit ID : Code used in interagency wildland fire to uniquely identify the governmental entity having overall land and resource management responsibility for a specific geographical area as provided by law.Cost Code : Concatenated accounting string, including Cost Center, Functional Area, and WBS components.Estimated Personnel Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 10 Budget Object Class that covers Personnel Compensation and Benefits (more specifically includes Personnel Compensation, Personnel Benefits, and Benefits for Former Personnel).Estimated Asset Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 30 Budget Object Class that covers Acquisition of Assets (more specifically - Equipment, Land and Structures, Investments and Loans).Estimated Grants Fixed Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 40 Budget Object Class that covers Grants and Fixed Charges (more specifically - Grants, Subsidies, and Contributions, Insurance Claims and Indemnities, Interest and Dividends, and Refunds).Estimated Contractual Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 20 Budget Object Class that covers purchases of Contractual Services and Supplies (more specifically - Travel and Transportation of Persons, Transportation of Things, Rents, Communications, and Utilities,
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TwitterThis mapping application provides current data on air quality throughout Region 9, particularly relating to active wildfire smoke. It features the following layers:
AirNow Air Quality Index (AQI) contours (last hour) for PM2.5 AirNow monitoring site data (last hour) for PM2.5 Current fire perimeters (NIFS) Satellite VIIRS Thermal Hotspots and Fire Activity within the last 48 hours Region 9 Tribal Lands Region 9 State Air Divisions
This application is configured by the following web map: https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=a2582a76644448f1a6a294a0a7bf054d
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TwitterThe National Risk Index Streets Basemap incorporates vector tile layers depicting background features and reference labels that have been optimized for use within the National Risk Index application.The National Risk Index is a dataset and online tool that helps to illustrate the communities most at risk for 18 natural hazards across the United States and territories: Avalanche, Coastal Flooding, Cold Wave, Drought, Earthquake, Hail, Heat Wave, Hurricane, Ice Storm, Landslide, Lightning, Riverine Flooding, Strong Wind, Tornado, Tsunami, Volcanic Activity, Wildfire, and Winter Weather. The National Risk Index provides Risk Index values, scores and ratings based on data for Expected Annual Loss due to natural hazards, Social Vulnerability, and Community Resilience. Separate values, scores and ratings are also provided for Expected Annual Loss, Social Vulnerability, and Community Resilience. For the Risk Index and Expected Annual Loss, values, scores and ratings can be viewed as a composite score for all hazards or individually for each of the 18 hazard types.
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TwitterThese datasets contains geospatial data representing current and future actions that may be funded by the Department of the Interior’s wildland fire management program and completed by Department of the Interior Bureau staff, Tribes, or their partners to treat wildland fuels or vegetative conditions to support wildfire resilience and resistance, community adaptation, and/or public and responder safety by their completion.The incorporation of available historic data is in progress.Warning: Please refrain from repeatedly querying the service using a relative date range. This includes using the “(not) in the last” operators in a Web Map filter and any reference to CURRENT_TIMESTAMP. This type of query puts undue load on the service and may render it temporarily unavailable.Data Dictionary defining Domain Values for treatments and activities: IFPRS Treatment and Activity Attribute Domain Values Logical Data Dictionary organized by User Interface section:**User Interface Section**Field Name : Definition**Context**Treatment ID/Activity ID : System-generated Identifier to uniquely identify an estimated Treatment/Activity Area Polygon.Actual Treatment ID/Actual Activity ID : System-generated identifier to uniquely identify an Actual Treatment/Activity Area Polygon.Is Point (Table Only) : System-generated flag identifying activities that are represented by a point location.Treatment Name/Activity Name : Short title for Treatment or Activity.Local ID : User-entered ID for Treatment or Activity.Class : First Tier, parent grouping to sort and filter actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Category : Mid-level, parent grouping to sort and filter actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Type : Lowest-level, categorization used to classify specific actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Notes : Open text field to provide a brief record of facts related to an activity or treatment.Parent Number : If created from other Treatment or Activity, Parent Treatment or Activity ID is displayed.Is Parent Treatment (Table Only) : Flag indicating that treatment has been copied.Status : Current state for treatment or activity: started, not started, completed, cancelled.Status Reason : Short description of why a treatment or activity was cancelled.Treatment Driver (Table Only) : Pending, BLM only use - not yet in use.Cancelled Date (Table Only) : Date treatment or activity status changed to Cancelled.**Location**Latitude : The center point of the treatment or activity indicated using the angular distance north of the earth's equator.Longitude : The center point of the treatment or activity indicated using the angular distance west of the meridian at Greenwich, England.Is WUI : WUI as defined by the Healthy Forests Restoration Act (HFRA) (Title I, Section 101, Subsection 16).Department : Above Agency in hierarchy.Is Department Manual (Table Only) : System automated, capturing manual update of Department field.Region : Above Unit in hierarchy, Relates to Department, Agencies.Agency : Above Region in hierarchy, Relates to Department. Unit : Lowest in hierarchy, Relates to Agencies, Regions.Congressional District : Area representing electoral divisions for the purpose of electing members of the United States House of Representatives.Tribe Name : Title for one of 574 federally recognized Native American Indian tribes and Alaska Native entities.State : Label associated with State & Territory boundaries.County : Area representing administrative or political subdivisions of a state.Calculated Acres : Measurement of the area estimated to be or actually treated or assessed by a treatment or activity. Calculated from perimeter.Veg Departure Percentage Derived : Percent Vegetation Departure from estimated historical conditions. Used to classify the information into the Vegetation Departure Index and Vegetation Departure Class (VCC) and Fire Regime Condition Class (FRCC). Ranges from 0-100. System-derived; however, user may update if better information is available.Veg Departure Percentage Manual : Percent Vegetation Departure from estimated historical conditions. Used to classify the information into the Vegetation Departure Index and Vegetation Departure Class (VCC) and Fire Regime Condition Class (FRCC). Ranges from 0-100. User update value - required if the mean value returns values such as Agriculture, Ice, Rock, etc.Is Vegetation Departure Manual (Table Only) : System automated, capturing manual update of Vegetation Departure field.**Proposal and Justification**Estimated Success Probability : 25% Treatment objectives are difficult to achieve and/or multiple treatments are likely to be necessary to achieve success. 50% Treatment objectives are moderately difficult to achieve and/or additional treatments are likely to be necessary to achieve success. 75% Treatment objectives are moderately easy to achieve and/or just one additional treatment is likely to be necessary to achieve success. 100% Treatment objectives are easy to achieve and/or this is likely the final treatment necessary to achieve success.Implementation Feasibility : The achievability of a treatment or activity - from very high, high, medium, to low. Low: Substantial resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are lacking and/or major constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. Medium: Some resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are in place and/or some constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. High: All resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are in place, however, some constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. Very High: All resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning, etc.) are in place and few constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion.Estimated Durability : Estimated duration in years (1-300) that treatment will accomplish its purpose. This information supports the understanding of maintenance needs and anticipated effectiveness when intersected by a wildfire.Treatment Priority : Relative priority of a treatment or activity as high, medium, or low. Low: Identified as lower priority by local management. Medium: Identified as moderate priority by local management. High: Identified as top priority by local management.**Costs**WBS : Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) Codes: The WBS code is the part of the DOI account code that allows DOI to track individual projects or undertakings required by laws, regulations, and/or reporting requirements.Funding Source : Wildland Fire Management funding sources: Fuels Management Regular (FMReg), Fuels BIL Admin (FMBILAdmin), Fuels BIL Control Locations (FMBilControlLocations), Fuels BIL Laborers (FMBilLaborers), Fuels BIL Prescribed Fire (FMBilPrescribedFire), Fuels BIL Thinning (FMBilThinning), Fuels BIL Regular (FMBilReg), Fuels Disaster Relief (FMDisasterRelief).Funding Department : Department providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Department.Funding Agency : Agency providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Agency.Funding Region : Region providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Region.Funding Unit : Unit providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location unit.Funding Sub Unit : Sub Unit providing funding for treatment or activity (currently only used for BLM). Does not need to be the same as location Sub Unit.Funding Unit Type : Characterization of units providing funding through staff, contracts, agreements, and equipment purchases: National, Regional, Local, Subunit, Tribal.Funding Tribe : Tribe providing funding for treatment or activity (only representative of tribes implementing a 638 compact or contracted program).Is RTRL : Flag indicating action is part of a Reserved Treaty Rights Lands (RTRL) project.Cost Center (Table Only) : Represents the detailed organizational structure, which captures detailed.Functional Area (Table Only) : Represents the funding level below Fund; e.g., bureau program activity. It defines the objective, function, or mission of the bureau’s major responsibilities, and is used to distribute the budget and track spending and revenue. This field is also used to capture the bureau Activity Based Costing (ABC) code.Unit ID : Code used in interagency wildland fire to uniquely identify the governmental entity having overall land and resource management responsibility for a specific geographical area as provided by law.Cost Code : Concatenated accounting string, including Cost Center, Functional Area, and WBS components.Estimated Personnel Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 10 Budget Object Class that covers Personnel Compensation and Benefits (more specifically includes Personnel Compensation, Personnel Benefits, and Benefits for Former Personnel).Estimated Asset Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 30 Budget Object Class that covers Acquisition of Assets (more specifically - Equipment, Land and Structures, Investments and Loans).Estimated Grants Fixed Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 40 Budget Object Class that covers Grants and Fixed Charges (more specifically - Grants, Subsidies, and Contributions, Insurance Claims and Indemnities, Interest and Dividends, and Refunds).Estimated Contractual Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 20 Budget Object Class that covers purchases of Contractual Services and Supplies (more specifically - Travel and Transportation of Persons, Transportation of Things, Rents, Communications, and Utilities,
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Implementation Status Definitions:Under Evaluation: Field-related assessments are ongoing including wildfire risk reduction treatment type selection, silvicultural diagnosis and prescriptions, and resource protections.Planned: Specific treatments have been selected and planned, and pre-implementation fieldwork such as layout is underway. Implementation could begin soon depending on factors such as funding, scheduling, weather conditions, and crew availability. Preparations of contracts or agreements may be ongoing.Underway: Work on the ground has begun and/or contracts or agreements have been awarded. Treatments may occur in various stages with multiple activities over a period of time (e.g. thinning, then piling, then pile burning).Completed: All stages of the wildfire risk reduction treatments have been implemented and are complete.Not Yet Evaluated: Field-related assessments have not yet begun.
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The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act include significant funding to execute fuels mitigation projects. Regions submitted proposed project boundaries designed to address community exposure to wildfire. The Executive Leadership Team of the Forest Service selected "Landscapes" for initial investment in fiscal years 2022 and 2023. Additional landscapes may be selected for future action. This dataset documents the official boundary of the landscapes selected for fuels treatment activities in the Wildfire Crisis Strategy. The public-facing version of these boundaries is called Wildfire Crisis Strategy Landscapes. This Dataset is current from June 9, 2023 to Present.Metadata and Downloads
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TwitterThe National Risk Index is a dataset and online tool to help illustrate the United States communities most at risk for 18 natural hazards: Avalanche, Coastal Flooding, Cold Wave, Drought, Earthquake, Hail, Heat Wave, Hurricane, Ice Storm, Landslide, Lightning, Riverine Flooding, Strong Wind, Tornado, Tsunami, Volcanic Activity, Wildfire, and Winter Weather.The National Risk Index leverages available source data for Expected Annual Loss due to these 18 hazard types, Social Vulnerability, and Community Resilience to develop a baseline risk measurement for each United States county and Census tract. These measurements are calculated using average past conditions, but they cannot be used to predict future outcomes for a community. The National Risk Index is intended to fill gaps in available data and analyses to better inform federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial decision makers as they develop risk reduction strategies.
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TwitterRegion 5 Forest Health Treatment Priority MappingThe number of acres of forests burning at high severity in recent years, combined with the recent drought-induced tree mortality event of 2015-2016 have more than ever highlighted unsustainable forest health conditions in California. Urgency for implementing preventative landscape-level tree density and fuels reduction treatments to restore and maintain forest resiliency to wildfires and drought (bark beetles) has now become an emergency. To accomplish meaningful landscape level treatments, land managers must be able to prioritize areas of highest risk that are conducive to project implementation. Forest Health Protection has analyzed a variety of readily available corporate GIS data sets to identify areas that are considered most at risk to high levels of bark beetle-caused tree mortality, have a high likelihood of experiencing stand replacing wildfire and are accessible and appropriate for mechanical thinning. This product has been used on several R5 National Forests for 5-year planning, identifying cross collaboration, all lands opportunities, and guiding layout of new projects using the Farm Bill insect and disease treatment Categorical Exclusion authority under NEPA. This webmap illustrates areas deemed at high risk of tree mortality, due to bark beetles, on all lands throughout the state. These same areas should also be considered at a risk to high-severity wildfire due to overstocked conditions and generally high fuel loading from past tree mortality. The webmap is suitable for landscape-level planning, rather than stand-level planning, as the data used to identify priority treatment areas are not sufficiently detailed for use at the stand level. Ground verification of areas identified in the map as priorities for treatment is highly recommended. Areas mapped outside of USDA National Forest System lands may not reflect recent management activities. Basic consideration for classification as high priority for treatment required that areas:Have not suffered moderate or high severity wildfire since at least 1998;Have not been thinned by the USDA Forest Service since at least 2005;Have not experienced stand-replacing disturbance, owing to clear-cut or natural mortality, since at least 2005;Contain stands with 60% or higher relative stand density;Are dominated by trees with diameter at breast height (DBH) of 11” or more.Lands that met the basic conditions were then classified as high priority for treatment based on the species composition and density of the stands that they contain.Highest priority was assigned to locations with stands that contain:Pines principally, and have stand density index (SDI) of 220 or higher; OR Fir-dominated mixed conifer and white fir, have SDI 270 or higher, and historically contained mostly pines; OR Pine-dominated mixed conifers, and have SDI 270 or higher.Pine-dominated stands are typically associated with drier sites and often experience higher levels of tree mortality associated with high stand density, bark beetles, and drought.Second priority was assigned to locations with stands that:Contain fir-dominated mixed conifer and white fir, have SDI 330 or higher;Were not classified as highest priority.Fir-dominated stands found on more mesic sites can also experience elevated tree mortality associated with high stand density, bark beetles, and drought, though generally at a lower level than pine-dominated stands or fir-dominated stands growing on historically pine-dominated sites.Download the thinning priority layers displayed in this WebMap. In addition to what is displayed on this webmap, the download also includesThird priority including smaller DBH of 6" - 11" 50% relative stand density (dependent on dominant species)Regional Dominance Type for each priority pixel
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TwitterThe National Risk Index Census Tracts Map incorporates Census tract-level vector tile layers for the Risk Index, Expected Annual Loss, Social Vulnerability, and Community Resilience. The map is used within the National Risk Index application.The National Risk Index is a dataset and online tool that helps to illustrate the communities most at risk for 18 natural hazards across the United States and territories: Avalanche, Coastal Flooding, Cold Wave, Drought, Earthquake, Hail, Heat Wave, Hurricane, Ice Storm, Landslide, Lightning, Riverine Flooding, Strong Wind, Tornado, Tsunami, Volcanic Activity, Wildfire, and Winter Weather. The National Risk Index provides Risk Index values, scores and ratings based on data for Expected Annual Loss due to natural hazards, Social Vulnerability, and Community Resilience. Separate values, scores and ratings are also provided for Expected Annual Loss, Social Vulnerability, and Community Resilience. For the Risk Index and Expected Annual Loss, values, scores and ratings can be viewed as a composite score for all hazards or individually for each of the 18 hazard types.Sources for Expected Annual Loss data include: Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Arizona State University’s (ASU) Center for Emergency Management and Homeland Security (CEMHS), California Department of Conservation, California Office of Emergency Services California Geological Survey, Colorado Avalanche Information Center, CoreLogic’s Flood Services, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) National Flood Insurance Program, Humanitarian Data Exchange (HDX), Iowa State University's Iowa Environmental Mesonet, Multi-Resolution Land Characteristics (MLRC) Consortium, National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) Cooperative Open Online Landslide Repository (COOLR), National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program (NEHRP), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Hurricane Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Weather Service (NWS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Office for Coastal Management, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Geophysical Data Center, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Storm Prediction Center, Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System, Puerto Rico Seismic Network, Smithsonian Institution's Global Volcanism Program, State of Hawaii’s Office of Planning’s Statewide GIS Program, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL), U.S. Census Bureau, U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), U.S. Forest Service's Fire Modeling Institute's Missoula Fire Sciences Lab, U.S. Forest Service's National Avalanche Center (NAC), U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), U.S. Geological Survey's Landslide Hazards Program, United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR), University of Alaska – Fairbanks' Alaska Earthquake Center, University of Nebraska-Lincoln's National Drought Mitigation Center (NDMC), University of Southern California's Tsunami Research Center, and Washington State Department of Natural Resources.Data for Social Vulnerability are provided by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) Social Vulnerability Index, and data for Community Resilience are provided by University of South Carolina's Hazards and Vulnerability Research Institute’s (HVRI) 2020 Baseline Resilience Indicators for Communities.The source of the boundaries for counties and Census tracts are based on the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2021 TIGER/Line shapefiles. Building value and population exposures for communities are based on FEMA’s Hazus 6.0. Agriculture values are based on the USDA 2017 Census of Agriculture.
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TwitterThese datasets contains geospatial data representing current and future actions that may be funded by the Department of the Interior’s wildland fire management program and completed by Department of the Interior Bureau staff, Tribes, or their partners to treat wildland fuels or vegetative conditions to support wildfire resilience and resistance, community adaptation, and/or public and responder safety by their completion.The incorporation of available historic data is in progress.Warning: Please refrain from repeatedly querying the service using a relative date range. This includes using the “(not) in the last” operators in a Web Map filter and any reference to CURRENT_TIMESTAMP. This type of query puts undue load on the service and may render it temporarily unavailable.Data Dictionary defining Domain Values for treatments and activities: IFPRS Treatment and Activity Attribute Domain Values Logical Data Dictionary organized by User Interface section:**User Interface Section**Field Name : Definition**Context**Treatment ID/Activity ID : System-generated Identifier to uniquely identify an estimated Treatment/Activity Area Polygon.Actual Treatment ID/Actual Activity ID : System-generated identifier to uniquely identify an Actual Treatment/Activity Area Polygon.Is Point (Table Only) : System-generated flag identifying activities that are represented by a point location.Treatment Name/Activity Name : Short title for Treatment or Activity.Local ID : User-entered ID for Treatment or Activity.Class : First Tier, parent grouping to sort and filter actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Category : Mid-level, parent grouping to sort and filter actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Type : Lowest-level, categorization used to classify specific actions planned and implemented to address threats mitigated by the wildland fire management program.Notes : Open text field to provide a brief record of facts related to an activity or treatment.Parent Number : If created from other Treatment or Activity, Parent Treatment or Activity ID is displayed.Is Parent Treatment (Table Only) : Flag indicating that treatment has been copied.Status : Current state for treatment or activity: started, not started, completed, cancelled.Status Reason : Short description of why a treatment or activity was cancelled.Treatment Driver (Table Only) : Pending, BLM only use - not yet in use.Cancelled Date (Table Only) : Date treatment or activity status changed to Cancelled.**Location**Latitude : The center point of the treatment or activity indicated using the angular distance north of the earth's equator.Longitude : The center point of the treatment or activity indicated using the angular distance west of the meridian at Greenwich, England.Is WUI : WUI as defined by the Healthy Forests Restoration Act (HFRA) (Title I, Section 101, Subsection 16).Department : Above Agency in hierarchy.Is Department Manual (Table Only) : System automated, capturing manual update of Department field.Region : Above Unit in hierarchy, Relates to Department, Agencies.Agency : Above Region in hierarchy, Relates to Department. Unit : Lowest in hierarchy, Relates to Agencies, Regions.Congressional District : Area representing electoral divisions for the purpose of electing members of the United States House of Representatives.Tribe Name : Title for one of 574 federally recognized Native American Indian tribes and Alaska Native entities.State : Label associated with State & Territory boundaries.County : Area representing administrative or political subdivisions of a state.Calculated Acres : Measurement of the area estimated to be or actually treated or assessed by a treatment or activity. Calculated from perimeter.Veg Departure Percentage Derived : Percent Vegetation Departure from estimated historical conditions. Used to classify the information into the Vegetation Departure Index and Vegetation Departure Class (VCC) and Fire Regime Condition Class (FRCC). Ranges from 0-100. System-derived; however, user may update if better information is available.Veg Departure Percentage Manual : Percent Vegetation Departure from estimated historical conditions. Used to classify the information into the Vegetation Departure Index and Vegetation Departure Class (VCC) and Fire Regime Condition Class (FRCC). Ranges from 0-100. User update value - required if the mean value returns values such as Agriculture, Ice, Rock, etc.Is Vegetation Departure Manual (Table Only) : System automated, capturing manual update of Vegetation Departure field.**Proposal and Justification**Estimated Success Probability : 25% Treatment objectives are difficult to achieve and/or multiple treatments are likely to be necessary to achieve success. 50% Treatment objectives are moderately difficult to achieve and/or additional treatments are likely to be necessary to achieve success. 75% Treatment objectives are moderately easy to achieve and/or just one additional treatment is likely to be necessary to achieve success. 100% Treatment objectives are easy to achieve and/or this is likely the final treatment necessary to achieve success.Implementation Feasibility : The achievability of a treatment or activity - from very high, high, medium, to low. Low: Substantial resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are lacking and/or major constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. Medium: Some resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are in place and/or some constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. High: All resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning) are in place, however, some constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion. Very High: All resources (staffing, expertise, equipment, planning, etc.) are in place and few constraints (weather, constituent perception, etc.) could impact completion.Estimated Durability : Estimated duration in years (1-300) that treatment will accomplish its purpose. This information supports the understanding of maintenance needs and anticipated effectiveness when intersected by a wildfire.Treatment Priority : Relative priority of a treatment or activity as high, medium, or low. Low: Identified as lower priority by local management. Medium: Identified as moderate priority by local management. High: Identified as top priority by local management.**Costs**WBS : Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) Codes: The WBS code is the part of the DOI account code that allows DOI to track individual projects or undertakings required by laws, regulations, and/or reporting requirements.Funding Source : Wildland Fire Management funding sources: Fuels Management Regular (FMReg), Fuels BIL Admin (FMBILAdmin), Fuels BIL Control Locations (FMBilControlLocations), Fuels BIL Laborers (FMBilLaborers), Fuels BIL Prescribed Fire (FMBilPrescribedFire), Fuels BIL Thinning (FMBilThinning), Fuels BIL Regular (FMBilReg), Fuels Disaster Relief (FMDisasterRelief).Funding Department : Department providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Department.Funding Agency : Agency providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Agency.Funding Region : Region providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location Region.Funding Unit : Unit providing funding for treatment or activity. Does not need to be the same as location unit.Funding Sub Unit : Sub Unit providing funding for treatment or activity (currently only used for BLM). Does not need to be the same as location Sub Unit.Funding Unit Type : Characterization of units providing funding through staff, contracts, agreements, and equipment purchases: National, Regional, Local, Subunit, Tribal.Funding Tribe : Tribe providing funding for treatment or activity (only representative of tribes implementing a 638 compact or contracted program).Is RTRL : Flag indicating action is part of a Reserved Treaty Rights Lands (RTRL) project.Cost Center (Table Only) : Represents the detailed organizational structure, which captures detailed.Functional Area (Table Only) : Represents the funding level below Fund; e.g., bureau program activity. It defines the objective, function, or mission of the bureau’s major responsibilities, and is used to distribute the budget and track spending and revenue. This field is also used to capture the bureau Activity Based Costing (ABC) code.Unit ID : Code used in interagency wildland fire to uniquely identify the governmental entity having overall land and resource management responsibility for a specific geographical area as provided by law.Cost Code : Concatenated accounting string, including Cost Center, Functional Area, and WBS components.Estimated Personnel Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 10 Budget Object Class that covers Personnel Compensation and Benefits (more specifically includes Personnel Compensation, Personnel Benefits, and Benefits for Former Personnel).Estimated Asset Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 30 Budget Object Class that covers Acquisition of Assets (more specifically - Equipment, Land and Structures, Investments and Loans).Estimated Grants Fixed Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 40 Budget Object Class that covers Grants and Fixed Charges (more specifically - Grants, Subsidies, and Contributions, Insurance Claims and Indemnities, Interest and Dividends, and Refunds).Estimated Contractual Cost : Approximate planned funding for the Group 20 Budget Object Class that covers purchases of Contractual Services and Supplies (more specifically - Travel and Transportation of Persons, Transportation of Things, Rents, Communications, and Utilities,
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TwitterThis map contains live feed sources for US current wildfire locations and perimeters, VIIRS and MODIS hot spots, wildfire conditions / red flag warnings, and wildfire potential. Each of these layers provides insight into where a fire is located, its intensity and the surrounding areas susceptibility to wildfire. Find out more about the Esri Disaster Response Program: www.esri.com/disaster About the Data: Click on the links in the LAYERS section for details about each layer Wildfire: This displays large active fire incidents and situation reports that have been entered into the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) database by local emergency response teams. The final official perimeter should be obtained from the host unit, which can be determined by looking at the Unit Id for any specific fire. The host unit is responsible for producing official and final perimeters for all incidents in their jurisdiction.Hot Spot: The MODIS and VIIRS thermal layers are created from the MODIS satellite detection system and represents hot spots that could be potential fire locations in the last 24 hour period at a horizontal resolution of 1 km and temporal resolution of 1 to 2 days. Wind Data (NOAA METAR): Typical METAR contains data for the temperature, dew point, wind speed and direction, precipitation, cloud cover and heights, visibility, and barometric pressure. A METAR may also contain information on precipitation amounts, lightning, and other information. Red Flag Warnings: Filtered from the Weather Watches and Warnings layer.