The "National Prescribed Fire Act of 2025" aims to facilitate prescribed fire activities on Federal and non-Federal land for resource management and wildfire risk reduction. The bill authorizes funding flexibility for prescribed fire activities, requires coordination for project prioritization, and mandates an increase in Federal land acreage subjected to prescribed fires. It establishes a Collaborative Prescribed Fire Program, enhancing the prescribed fire workforce, including provisions for hazard pay, workforce retention, and increasing employment avenues. The bill also aims to establish a national prescribed fire education program, promote greater use of prescribed fire while addressing public health and safety, requires landscape-scale federal prescribed fire plans, emphasizes collaboration, and consultation with Indian Tribes, and introduces reporting requirements for progress tracking.
National Prescribed Fire Act of 2025
This bill directs the Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of the Interior to increase the number and size of prescribed fires conducted on federal lands.
For 10 years, Interior and USDA must annually conduct prescribed fires on federal land so that the total acreage where prescribed fires are conducted is 10% greater than the previous fiscal year.
Interior and USDA must establish a collaborative prescribed fire program to provide financial assistance to eligible entities to conduct prescribed fires in priority landscapes.
Interior and USDA may enter into cooperative agreements or contracts with states, Indian tribes, counties, municipal governments, fire districts, nongovernmental organizations, or private entities to coordinate prescribed fires on federal land.
Interior and USDA must expand employment opportunities for prescribed fire practitioners, including by expanding hazard pay, supporting underrepresented groups, and establishing additional training centers.
To address the public health and safety risk of the expanded use of prescribed fire, the Environmental Protection Agency must coordinate with state, tribal, and local air quality agencies to support the environmental review of wildland fires.
