Protection Areas and Boundaries. Protection areas, as defined by boundaries, will be mapped and or described, and made a part of geographic, statewide, or sub-geographic area operating plans. Protection Areas may include lands under the jurisdiction of another agency as authorized by law.
Protection Areas and Boundaries. Annually, the Agencies will agree upon wildland fire protection responsibilities for lands within their respective jurisdictions. Protection areas and boundaries will be established, mapped and/or described, and made part of the Statewide Annual Operating Plan.
Protection Areas and Boundaries. Protection areas, as defined by boundaries, will be mapped and or described, and made a part of annual operating plans.
Protection Areas and Boundaries. Protection areas, as defined by boundaries, will be mapped and or described and made a part of annual operating plans. The Federal Agencies and the State have agreed upon the DPAs in which each assumes the responsibility of maintaining a wildland fire protection system. Said maps show the established DPAs and are kept current on an annual basis in accordance with Exhibit I, Changes to Direct Protection Area (DPA).
Protection Areas and Boundaries. The area described by this plan includes all lands within the boundaries of Larimer County, including incorporated cities, towns, and lands administered by the United States Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and National Park Service. For the purpose of this plan regarding initial attack fire response, the respective signatories agree to permit and encourage the closest suppression resource to take suppression action regardless of administrative boundaries. A current map of fire protection districts, county lands, USFS, BLM, and NPS boundaries will be kept in Larimer County Dispatch and Fort Xxxxxxx Interagency Dispatch.
Protection Areas and Boundaries. An interactive map of Current Wildfire Protection in Montana is maintained by MT DNRC. The map will be reviewed annually at the Sub- Geographic level. Maps and databases that depict wildland protection unit boundaries, lands that have been exchanged for protection purposes and areas that have local government fire protection responsibilities are compiled and maintained by the State. Protection agreements will be reviewed annually at the Sub-Geographic level; changes to protection will be approved at the Regional (federal) and Bureau (state) level. Reciprocal initial attack zone and Special Management Areas will be documented in Sub-Geographic Area Operating Plans. Initial attack, mutual aid, or assistance for hire among federal, state, and local government entities should be described in the Sub-Geographic Operating Plans or in local agreements between federal agencies and local entities.
Protection Areas and Boundaries. If listed below, protection planning is documented in the referenced Exhibit to this operating plan. Fees are identified in the Exhibits. If not listed below, protection areas need to be documented in local operating plans. Protection Area Protection Agency Jurisdictional Agency Exhibit C DNR/BIA BIA/DNR Oregon and the USFS consider their entire agency’s lands in the state of Oregon affected by this agreement to be reciprocal. Reciprocal Fire Protection Assistance between other agencies in the State of Oregon will be determined at the local sub geographic area and documented in local operating plans. In Washington, reciprocal fire protection assistance will be determined and documented in local operating plans. The reciprocal period is 24 hours unless modified at the local area. Document any modifications in local operating plans. For Protection Areas listed above, see Exhibit C.
Protection Areas and Boundaries. 1. Unprotected Lands: Unprotected lands are lands for which there is no agreement with an established fire protection organization such as a Rural Fire Department, Fire Protective Association (FPA), Municipal Fire Department, RFPA, a county, the IDL, Timber Protective Association (TPA), or Federal agency. When wildland fires occur on unprotected lands and fire threatens any agency’s resource values, there is discretion to engage in fire suppression activities to protect those resource values consistent with their agency polices. There are approximately 1.2 million acres of unprotected land across the State of Idaho. The State of Idaho has authority to protect private lands, but Idaho Code does not allow for the payment of such responding resources.
Protection Areas and Boundaries. Annually, the Agencies within the zones shall map and describe protection areas, as defined by boundaries, and make them a part of AOPs.
Protection Areas and Boundaries. Identify areas (map and/or describe). Maps of protection and boundary areas are available from each agency to this OP and are not included in this document. Updates will be shared as needed.