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Originally published Monday, June 29, 2009 at 12:00 AM

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Fewer inmates to fight fires due to state budget cuts

Legislative budget cuts mean the state Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will have fewer inmate work crews trained to fight forest fires this year.

The Spokesman-Review

Legislative budget cuts mean the state Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will have fewer inmate work crews trained to fight forest fires this year.

Operations were closed and crews cut from two prisons in Snohomish and Kitsap counties, as well as from other facilities, officials said. In the past, in partnership with the state Department of Corrections, the DNR maintained 48 10-person inmate firefighting crews stationed at various correction facilities throughout the state. In total, about 16 crews were cut.

Western Washington crews got the ax, but officials recognized the need for firefighting capabilities in Eastern Washington, where the climate is hotter and drier and fire season is predicted to heat up above normal this year. Five inmate work crews based out of the Airway Heights Correction Center in Spokane County were spared.

"The DNR recognized that most of the fire load is in Eastern Washington," said Matt Castle, with the DNR based in Spokane.

Inmate work crews are typically brought in to construct fire lines and work on mop-up in later stages of a fire, said Joe Shramek, DNR's resource-protection division manager based in Olympia. During large fires, crews can be brought in from all over the state to assist local firefighting teams. The cost savings of using inmate crews is substantial, Shramek said.

"The main issue is the Legislature directed us to try and reduce the costs of suppressing a fire," Shramek said. Having to hire private crews to assist because there aren't enough inmate crews could mean an increase in costs, he said.

"My main concern is not so much whether we we'll have crews available," he said. "It's the cost."

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

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