As attention on the issue grows, major wildfire smoke conference kicks off in Loveland

In recent months, concern about the health risks wildland firefighters face has been growing. Now a major conference exploring that issue has started in Colorado.

Over the summer, the New York Times published a series of stories documenting what it called an โ€œoccupational health crisisโ€ due to the heavy smoke that wildland firefighters breathe without respiratory protection. During a U.S. House oversight hearing last month, members pressed the U.S. Forest Service chief on the issue. Certain masks are now available for voluntary use, and federal officials are studying further changes.

โ€œA lot of moving parts,โ€ said Luke Montrose, who runs a lab at Colorado State University that focuses heavily on smoke and firefighter health. Heโ€™s the organizer of the Rocky Mountain Wildfire Smoke Symposium, which started Monday in Loveland. Its theme this year: Working to Protect Those Who Work in Smoke.

โ€œI’m hoping to meet the moment, and leverage the fact that this is on the tip of everyone’s tongue,โ€ he said. โ€œThis is on everyone’s mind.โ€

โ€œWhat we want to make sure of is that the researchers, the practitioners, the firefighters, the firefighter leadership and the policy makers are all on the same page,โ€ he added. โ€œAnd one way to do that is by creating a platform that gives everyone a seat at the table, and that is what we have tried to do.โ€

While wildland firefighters will be a focus of the conference, Montrose said that dangers faced by others toiling outside in the smoke โ€“ like agricultural and construction workers โ€“ will also be discussed.

KBSU-FM 90.3 Boise

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