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The U.S. Wildland Fire Service in Alaska (USWFS) is located at Fort Wainwright, Alaska, provides wildland fire suppression services for over 244 million acres of Department of the Interior and Native Corporation Lands in Alaska. In addition, USWFS has other statewide responsibilities that include: interpretation of fire management policy; oversight of the BLM Alaska Aviation program; fuels management projects; and operating and maintaining advanced communication and computer systems such as the Alaska Lightning Detection System. AFS also maintains a National Incident Support Cache. The U.S. Wildland Fire Service in Alaska provides wildland fire suppression services for America’s “Last Frontier” on an interagency basis with the State of Alaska Department of Natural Resources Division of Forestry & Fire Protection, U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service, Bureau of Indian Affairs, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S. Military in Alaska.
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Smokejumpers, water-scoopers corral fire burning near mining district north of Fairbanks
Smokejumpers and water-scooping airplanes were successful in subduing a wildfire burning in a mining district near Eureka about 77 miles northwest of Fairbanks Saturday afternoon. The efforts eight BLM and U.S. Forest smokejumpers and two Single Engine Air Tractors, or… Read More ›
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Smokejumpers protecting cabin, Native allotment from East Fork Fire north of St. Mary’s
Smokejumpers anticipate having a few days of work ahead of them to ensure the East Fork Fire won’t impact the allotment. Additionally, this will allow fire personnel to be in the area if they are needed to move to other allotments and cabins that need protection from the 2,000-acre fire burning in the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge. This lightning-caused fire started Tuesday.
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Smokejumpers wrapping up work on two new lightning-caused tundra fires in Western Alaska
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First of seven BLM AFS Type 2 contract crews available for wildfire response
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Alaskans should prepare for wildfire season
Advice from Alaska Wildland Fire Managers reminding people of key ways to protect each other and our communities from wildfire dangers.
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Prescribed burn operations planned on military training lands in FNSB to reduce wildfire threat
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Smokejumpers mopping up wildfire after first jump of the 2022 Alaska fire season
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Burning operations planned for military training lands in Interior Alaska to reduce wildfire threat
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History of the fire beater
How Alaska smokejumper ingenuity led to the development of a tool widely used by Alaska wildland firefighters.
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BLM innovates rural Alaska wildland firefighting and keeps traditions alive





