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This blog is maintained as an effort to coordinate and collocate responding agencies' information for easier public access during events on the Kenai Peninsula. The information here is written and provided by the contributing agencies. NOTE: The blog will be updated as the need arises and may be dormant at times.

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

8/21/19 Division of Forestry: emergency burn closure for Kenai Peninsula

Due to extreme wildfire danger and current wildfire activity in Southcentral Alaska, as well as limited resources available to respond to new starts, the Alaska Division of Forestry is instituting an emergency burn closure on state, private, borough and municipal lands within the Kenai Peninsula and Matanuska-Susitna boroughs effective at 8:00 a.m. today, August 21, 2019.

A map of the burn closure areas for the Kenai Peninsula and Mat-Su Valley boroughs. For a downloadable PDF version of the For a PDF of this order to email or print, click here: https://tinyurl.com/8-21ChugachFireRest .

All burning, including campfires and the use of charcoal grills, is prohibited. Devices that can be turned on and off, such as gas and pellet grills and backpacking or camp stoves that use fuel or compressed fuel canisters, will still be allowed. The closure includes campfires in established fire pits or rings in designated campgrounds.

This burn closure is in addition to fire restrictions imposed by the Kenai Peninsula and Mat-Su boroughs and will remain in place until conditions moderate. Visit the Kenai Peninsula Fires interactive map viewer to view closure areas at www.kpboem.com.

Persistent warm, dry conditions over the past three weeks have produced extremely high fire danger in Southcentral Alaska and resulted in several new wildfires that are straining local initial attack resources, including the Deshka Landing and McKinley fires in the Mat-Su Valley and Caribou Lake and North Fork fires on the Kenai Peninsula. The Swan Lake Fire, which has been burning for 2 ½ months on the Kenai Peninsula, has also seen a dramatic increase in activity in recent days.

Alaska’s fire managers ask residents and visitors alike on the Kenai Peninsula and in the Mat-Su Valley to adhere to the burn closure to help prevent any additional human-caused wildfires that would stress firefighting resources.

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