Technical Programs - Smoke Management Plan
Smoke Management PlanTable of Contents
• Purpose The public policy of the State of Nevada is to achieve and maintain levels of air quality which will protect human health and safety, prevent injury to plant and animal life, prevent damage to property, and preserve visibility and the scenic and esthetic values of the state. The purpose of this program is to coordinate and facilitate the statewide management of prescribed outdoor burning on lands in the state of Nevada. This program is designed to meet the requirements of NRS445B.100 through 445B.845, inclusive which deal with air pollution, and the requirements of the EPA Interim Air Quality Policy on Wildland and Prescribed Fires (May 1998). This program in no way supersedes the authority of local governments to regulate and control smoke and air pollution under NRS244.361 and NRS268.410 or the authority of the state forester to regulate controlled fires under NRS527.122 through 527.128. An ongoing cooperative effort by all organizations involved in the use of prescribed fire for accepted range, agricultural and forestry practices is essential to the success of this plan.
• Protect human health and safety from the effects of outdoor burning  Smoke Management Responsibilities Each land manager involved in the use of prescribed fire, whether management or naturally ignited, is responsible for proper smoke management for the prescribed fires it conducts and shall identify and implement appropriate smoke management techniques to minimize the amount and/or impact of smoke produced and to avoid exceedances of the Nevada and National Ambient Air Quality Standards. The Division of Environmental Protection will work with the land managers and air agencies in other states to ensure that interstate transport of air pollutants does not unfairly restrict the ability of Nevada's land managers to implement prescribed fire programs. Class I Area includes all international parks, national wilderness areas which exceed 5,000 acres in size, national memorial parks which exceed 5,000 acres in size, and national parks which exceed 6,000 acres in size and which are in existence on August 7, 1977 (CAA Section 162(a)). The only Class I area designated in Nevada is the Jarbidge Wilderness. Land manager includes any federal, state, local or private entity that administers, directs, oversees or controls the use of public or private land, including the application of fire to the land. National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) refers to standards for maximum acceptable concentration of pollutants in the ambient air to protect public health with an adequate margin of safety, and to protect public welfare from any known or anticipated adverse effects of such pollutants (e.g., visibility impairment, soiling, materials damage, etc.) in the ambient air. PM10 refers to particulate matter 10 microns in diameter or smaller. PM2.5 refers to particulate matter 2.5 microns in diameter or smaller. Prescribed fire includes management ignited and conducted to meet management objectives. It does not include fire training, public open burning or any other type of burning that is not specifically listed in the applicability section on page 5 of this document. Public open burning is the burning of vegetative yard waste conducted by single family residences within the jurisdiction of and under a permit obtained by the local fire protection agency. The vegetative yard waste must be generated only from the residence conducting the burn. Smoke management includes but is not limited to techniques to reduce emissions and smoke impacts, the identification and avoidance of smoke sensitive areas, the monitoring and evaluation of the smoke impacts of each burn, and coordination among land management agencies to minimize cumulative impacts. Smoke sensitive areas include but are not limited to Class I areas as well as other designated scenic and/or important views especially during times of significant visitor use, urban and rural population centers, homes, schools, hospitals, nursing homes, airports, recreational areas, and other locations that may be sensitive to smoke impacts for health, safety, and/or aesthetic reasons. Suppression action includes any activity in which the responsible fire control agency personnel are actively trying to confine, contain or control the fire. Use of natural fire barriers such as cliffs, rocks, or rivers, etc., to contain the fire may be regarded as suppression as long as this is part of the suppression strategy. Wildfire is a fire occurring on wildland that is not meeting management objectives and thus requires a suppression response (NWCG). Wildland fire use is the management of naturally ignited wildland fires to accomplish specific prestated resource management objectives in predefined geographic areas outlined in forest management plans. The provisions of this smoke management program apply to all areas of the state under the jurisdiction of the Nevada Division of Environmental Protection. The Division's jurisdiction does not include Washoe or Clark Counties or any Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) trust lands. Provided no reasonable alternative exists (see p. 5 -- Permit Application for Management Ignited Prescribed Fires, Section (a) for a discussion of reasonable alternatives), open burning under this smoke management program may be conducted for the following types of projects:
The permitting requirements described below do not apply to small wood fires for recreational, ceremonial, heating or cooking purposes or to burning conducted by single-family residences, as defined under public open burning, at least one mile beyond the boundaries of the following cities towns and areas:
For burns conducted by single-family residences within the cities, towns and areas listed above, the local fire protection agency must request a burn permit to allow public open burning. An open burn permit must be obtained for any fire training being conducted or any other open burns not specifically listed above regardless of size. Smoke Management Contingency Plan In plans for prescribed fires, each land management organization will have contingency plans identified enabling it to reduce smoke emissions. Contingency plans will be implemented when meteorological conditions warrant, the Nevada Division of Environmental Protection, Bureau of Air Quality determines that acceptable limits of smoke accumulation are or will be exceeded, and/or the responsible land management organization anticipates that the prescription for a particular fire will be exceeded. Should prescriptive elements cease to conform to those in the approved open burn permit, the land manager shall immediately take the appropriate corrective action to reduce further impacts and shall consult with the Division as expeditiously as possible. Authority
 Permit Application for Management Ignited Prescribed Fires Land managers must obtain a permit from the Nevada Division of Environmental Protection for all management ignited prescribed fires which emit greater than 1.0 tons of PM10. The permit must be obtained prior to ignition. For each project emitting between 1.0 and 10 tons of PM10, a one- page permit application form must be completed and submitted to the Division at least two weeks prior to the planned date of ignition. For fires emitting more than 10 tons of PM10, the complete application package must be submitted at least 30 days prior to the planned ignition date. Completed applications will be reviewed by the Division and, if approved, signed and returned to the applicant as soon as possible, but at least one week prior to the planned date of ignition. Should circumstances occur which will not allow the land manager to submit a completed permit application 14 or 30 days prior to the burn, the Division will make a good faith effort to work with the land manager to issue the permit as soon as possible. Concerns raised about this approach by the agricultural community will be addressed after survey results have been evaluated. The issuance of a permit does not constitute final approval. Final approval must be obtained 24 hours prior to ignition (see "Pre-ignition Notification and Authorization" p. 8). Final approval will be based on ambient air quality conditions. If a request for final approval is denied, the Division will provide the land manager with written record of that denial within 10 days after the verbal denial was issued. In reviewing the application for an open burning permit, the Division will consider the following factors:
Valid permit dates. Although the Division would like to monitor potential burns as closely as possible, we recognize that land managers must be able to respond to meteorological conditions appropriate for the burn being permitted. Permits will be issued that are valid for up to three months. If more time is required, the applicant can request additional time when the application is submitted. Each permit shall be valid for the dates listed on the permit. The permittee must note the expiration date of each permit. Requests for an extension or modification of dates may be made verbally, but must be approved by the Division in writing prior to the burn taking place. Permit Application Requirements 1. For prescribed fires emitting more than 1.0 but less than 10 tons of PM10, the permit applicant need only complete the application form provided by the Division (Appendix 1). 2. For prescribed fires emitting more than 10 tons of PM10 and located more than 15 miles from a smoke sensitive area, Class 1 area or carbon monoxide or particulate matter non-attainment area, the completed application must be accompanied by a burn plan. The burn plan must include the following:
b. The responsible personnel; c. An emergency telephone number that is answered 24 hours a day; d. The property owner; e The agency/contractor conducting the burn; f. The burn prescription; g. The number of acres to be burned, the type of fuel, fuel loading estimates and the ignition technique to be used; h. A list of agencies and private parties involved; i. A model predicting the impact of smoke (both visibility and PM10) on smoke sensitive receptors. The model shall incorporate all known smoke sensitive receptor within 15 miles of the fire; j. Discussion of public notification to be conducted; and, k. Evaluation of alternative treatments. 3. For prescribed fire projects emitting more than 25 tons of PM10, or more than 10 tons if the burn is within 15 miles of a Class I area, an area that is non-attainment for particulates, a carbon monoxide non- attainment area, or other smoke sensitive area, the following information must also be submitted with the burn plan:
b. Emission estimates including the models, methods and emission factors used; c. Identification of smoke sensitive areas; d. Safety and Contingency plans; e. List of potential affected air regulators to be notified; and, f. Air monitoring to be conducted. The following permit conditions shall apply to permits issued by the Division of Environmental Protection for open burning:
2. Pre-ignition notification and approval: For projects emitting more than 1.0 tons of PM10, the land manager must notify the Division on the business day preceding the burn and received final approval before the prescribed burn can be ignited. 3. Smoke Management: In order to minimize smoke impacts and emissions, each permittee shall apply the best smoke management and emission reduction techniques. It is recognized that no two fires are alike in terms of smoke emissions and impacts. Neither are any two fires alike in the smoke management options available. Therefore, the land manager will select appropriate smoke management techniques on a case-by-case basis. While the application of smoke management is required in order to obtain a permit from the Division, it is a general goal and responsibility of the land manager to select the appropriate emission reduction and impact minimization techniques for each fire. 4. Precautions: Prescribed fires shall be supervised by one or more responsible persons dependent on the type of burning. Precautions shall be taken to localize the burning and to, in no way, constitute a fire hazard to persons or property within or adjacent to the burn area. The granting authority and the employees or agents thereof, in the issuing of a permit, do not assume any responsibility or liability for any hazardous condition created by the permittee which results in damage to the person or property of the permittee, or the person or property of any third person. 5. Availability of Permit: The approved permit or copy thereof shall be available at the burn site. 6. Inspection by the Division: All open burning operations shall be subject to inspection by the Division. 7. Local Regulations: The permit is for compliance with state air pollution control requirements only and is not a permit to violate any existing local laws, rules, regulations, or ordinances regarding fire, zoning, or building. 8. Revocation of Permit: If at any time the Division determines that any condition of the permit is not being complied with, the permit may be revoked for the specific project where non-compliance is occurring. At such time, all burning activities at the site of the non-compliance shall be terminated. In addition to revocation of the permit, the Division may take any other enforcement action authorized under state statutes, rules and regulations. 9. Other Conditions may be added to the permit if deemed necessary by the Division and approved by the SMP working group. The land manager shall not ignite a prescribed burn for which a permit is required without receiving the approval of the Division. The land manager must notify the Division as expeditiously as practicable, but no later than 10 am of the business day preceding the burn. Notifications must be made to the Smoke Management Coordinator at (775) 687-4670, ext 3083. If the coordinator is unavailable, the land manager will leave a message including the date of the proposed burn, the permit number, location, responsible agency, estimated number of acres to be burned and a contact name and phone number. The Division shall issue a final decision, either approval, approval with conditions, or disapproval, of the burn, on the same business day. If the Division does not communicate its decision by 5 pm of the same business day, the burn is deemed approved. If ambient air quality conditions are poor enough that no burning will be allowed on a specific day in certain areas of the state, and land managers are unable to reach the coordinator directly, his/her voice mail message will specify the areas of the state where no burning is allowed and land managers calling in to request authorization to burn should assume that their request has been denied. If a land manager wishes to receive a written notice of the denial, a message to that effect should be left on the coordinator's voice mail. For prescribed fire projects that emit more than 10 tons of PM10 and are within 15 miles of the state border, BIA trust lands managed under the jurisdiction of a tribal air quality agency, or the borders of Washoe or Clark counties, the air regulators of those counties, tribes or bordering states must be notified prior to the burn. A list of the agencies and individuals to be notified must be included in the burn plans. Appendix 2 provides a listing of state, local and BIA/tribal contacts. This list will be updated by the Division at least annually. 1. Permit application:
Wildfire will not require a permit. Wildland Fire Use and Wildfire Reporting The land manager in whose jurisdiction a naturally ignited prescribed fire or a wildfire occurs shall report all such fires when it is expected to attain a size of greater than 300 acres for rangeland and 100 acres for forest land on a daily basis to the Division. The land manager shall include in the report the location, estimated control date, and estimated incident size of each wildfire. For wildland fire use, the land manager shall report the location, the daily anticipated growth in the number of acres potentially burned, the maximum allowable perimeter or size, the type or types of fuels involved, the actual acres burned on the previous day, and the anticipated duration of the fire. The land manager shall also provide information on projected smoke and air quality impacts if requested by the Division. This may include mapping the daytime and nighttime smoke path and down-drainage flow for 15 miles from the burn site, with smoke sensitive areas delineated; modeling; or, air quality monitoring. If this information can be made available to the Division through regional dispatch centers, no additional reporting will be required. In areas where burns under 100 acres may have significant air quality and public health impacts (e.g. the Tahoe Basin), the Division will work with land managers in those areas to develop additional reporting requirements as necessary. Annual Reporting of Fire Activity Each permitted user of prescribed fire who emits more than 10 tons of PM10 per year shall provide the Division with an annual reporting of fire activity by March 31 for the previous calendar year's (January through December) activities. Information to be reported includes: the permit number, the name of the individual conducting the burn or the agency name and contact, date and time ignition began, date and time the fire is declared out, actual acreage burned, fuel type, fuel loading, emissions estimates, emission factors used and their source, names of air quality regulators notified and the notification date, and the emission reduction techniques used. All permitted ignitions must be reported, even if they were not carried out. The emissions inventory shall be made available to all interested Working Group members. Fire Behavior and Environmental Monitoring 1. Prescribed Fire -- Management Ignited and Wildland Fire Use
a. If at any time the responsible land management agency determines that the prescription for a particular prescribed fire has been exceeded (including impacts on visibility) and/or conditions of the permit are not being met (i.e., designated areas for burn, proper notification, etc.) the responsible parties shall promptly initiate suppression action unless, after consultation with the Division, the prescription is modified, or other appropriate actions are taken. The extent of the monitoring should match the size of the fire and potential human health impacts. For small fires or fires that are remote enough to result in no noticeable impact on the public, visual monitoring of the direction of the plume and monitoring nuisance complaints by the public may be sufficient. Other monitoring techniques include posting personnel on vulnerable roadways to look for visibility impairment and initiate safety measures for motorists; posting personnel at other smoke sensitive areas to look for smoke intrusions; using aircraft to track the progress of smoke plumes; and continued tracking of meteorological conditions during the fire. For large fires expected to last more than one day, locating real-time particulate matter monitors at smoke sensitive areas may be warranted to facilitate timely response to smoke impacts. If pollutant levels are anticipated to create a significant threat to human health, the Division may require the responsible land management agency to monitor in or near population centers impacted by smoke generated from a particular prescribed fire or wildfire. The Division will assist in identification of instrumentation, site selection, installation of instrumentation, operation, calibration, quality assurance, quality control, laboratory analysis, data interpretation and supplies. Impact from wildfire will be monitored by the Division. Due to the cooperative interagency nature of this Smoke Management Plan, cost sharing and pooling of resources associated with monitoring and/or modeling is understood. However, especially with respect to prescribed fires, the ultimate responsibility and financial burden is on the land management agency consistent with the principle that the source of pollution should internalize the costs of its pollution, the so called "polluter pays" principle that is applied to other sources of air pollution as well. The Division may therefore ask the responsible land management agency for financial reimbursement as negotiated and mutually agreed upon on a case-by-case basis between the Division and the responsible land management agency before resources are expended on modeling or monitoring. Land managers and air regulators will work together to assess program implementation needs and to develop a mechanism for providing adequate program support. Program support may be in the form of in-kind services, equipment and space. Program support agreements will be formalized under an MOU and an Interagency Agreement between the Nevada Division of Environmental Protection and the land management agencies. The agreement will be evaluated periodically to ensure that implementation needs continue to be met. Smoke Management and Emission Reduction Techniques Each land manager conducting prescribed burning shall implement as many smoke management and emission reduction measures as are feasible for the specific burn and shall include a description of the emission reduction techniques used in the annual fire activity report submitted. The following smoke management and emission reduction techniques are considered best management practices. However, the Division understands that emission reduction techniques (or best available control measures) are not without potential negatives and must be prescribed and used with careful professional judgment and full awareness of possible tradeoffs. Tehcniques include:
2. Burning in seasons characterized by meteorological conditions that allow for good smoke dispersion; 3. Using mass ignition techniques such as aerial ignition by helicopter to produce high intensity fires with short duration impacts; 4. Igniting burns under good-to-excellent ventilation conditions and suspending operations under poor smoke dispersion conditions; 5. Considering smoke impacts on activities conducted by local communities and land users; 6. Burning only those fuels essential to meet resource management objectives; 7. Minimizing duff consumption and smoldering through fuel moisture considerations; 8. Minimizing dirt content when slash piles are constructed by using a root rake on material-moving equipment and by constructing piles under dry soil conditions or by using hand piling methods; 9. Burning piles when other burns are not feasible, such as when snow or rain is present; 10. Using all opportunities that meet the burn prescription and all burn locations to spread smoke impacts over a broader time period and geographic area; 11. Burning during optimum mid-day dispersion hours, with all ignitions in a burn unit completed by 3 p.m. to prevent trapping smoke in inversions or diurnal wind flow patterns; 12. Using chunking of piles and other consolidations of burning material to enhance fuel consumption and to minimize smoke production; 13. Implementing maintenance burning in a periodic rotation mimicking natural fire cycles to reduce excessive fuel accumulations and subsequent excessive smoke production through smoldering or wildfire; and, 14. Managing smoke impacts as follows:
b. Using appropriate signing if smoke will impact any point of public access, i.e. highways, dirt roads, trails, campgrounds, etc.; c. Notifying the public at potentially impacted smoke sensitive areas; and, d. Determining nighttime impacts and taking appropriate precautions. Burner Qualifications All burns conducted by state and federal land managers shall be conducted by personnel trained in prescribed fire and smoke management techniques to the minimum level required by the land management agency in charge of the burn. The local fire management officer of the state or federal land management agency having jurisdiction over the prescribed burn shall have had smoke management training obtained through successful completion of a National Wildfire Coordinating Group (or equivalent) course dedicated to smoke management. Surveillance and Enforcement A land manager conducting a prescribed burn shall permit Division staff to enter and inspect burn sites unannounced, before, during and after burns, to verify the accuracy of the permit information and compliance with the burn plan and smoke management plan, if appropriate. Site inspections conducted by the Division during and after fires shall be coordinated with the appropriate the land manager as necessary to ensure the safety of Division employees and land managers. Should protective equipment be required, Division employees will have been properly trained in its use prior to entering any restricted area. Except under extraordinary circumstances, inspections will be conducted during reasonable business hours. Inspections on private property will be limited to valid permit days and within one week following the prescribed fire. Failure to comply with the procedures and conditions specified in the permit may result in enforcement action. Penalties of up to $10,000 per day per violation may be assessed. |
