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Oregon State University’s In the Woods podcast host Jacob Putney interviews OSU Extension regional fire specialists Chris Adlam (southwest Oregon) and Micah Schmidt (northeast Oregon) about Prescribed Burn Associations (PBAs) and their role in expanding prescribed fire on non-federal lands. They describe how fire suppression became dominant over the past century despite long Indigenous burning traditions, and how PBAs re-emerged in the 1990s in the Great Plains and later spread to California and Oregon. PBAs are community networks where neighbors and partner organizations share labor, equipment, planning, and training to conduct safe burns, often with volunteers and sometimes paid coordination. Guests discuss Oregon PBAs’ growth and accomplishments, benefits like changing public attitudes and building social license, and barriers including capacity, permitting, funding, liability concerns, and limited region-specific research. They share ways to get involved via OSU’s Extension Fire Program resources, trainings, and documentaries.
00:00 Podcast Intro
00:32 Meet The Hosts
01:21 Chris Fire Ecology Path
02:22 Micah Prescribed Fire Work
03:32 What PBAs Are
03:52 Prescribed Fire History
05:11 PBA Origins And Growth
06:47 How PBAs Form Operate
09:49 Who Can Participate
12:58 Oregon PBAs Impact
17:22 Changing Fire Relationships
20:48 Extension Role In PBAs
24:01 Barriers And Challenges
26:14 Prescribed Fire Roadblocks
26:27 Landowner Research Gaps
27:39 Permits And Capacity Fixes
28:36 Future Of PBAs
30:34 More Fire And Youth Training
31:39 How To Join Or Start
35:39 Volunteer Skills Needed
37:20 Parting Thoughts And Tribal Roots
38:57 Training And Broad Support
41:45 Lightning Round Micah
45:33 Lightning Round Chris
50:00 Wrap Up And Credits
By In the Woods Podcast4.7
1212 ratings
Oregon State University’s In the Woods podcast host Jacob Putney interviews OSU Extension regional fire specialists Chris Adlam (southwest Oregon) and Micah Schmidt (northeast Oregon) about Prescribed Burn Associations (PBAs) and their role in expanding prescribed fire on non-federal lands. They describe how fire suppression became dominant over the past century despite long Indigenous burning traditions, and how PBAs re-emerged in the 1990s in the Great Plains and later spread to California and Oregon. PBAs are community networks where neighbors and partner organizations share labor, equipment, planning, and training to conduct safe burns, often with volunteers and sometimes paid coordination. Guests discuss Oregon PBAs’ growth and accomplishments, benefits like changing public attitudes and building social license, and barriers including capacity, permitting, funding, liability concerns, and limited region-specific research. They share ways to get involved via OSU’s Extension Fire Program resources, trainings, and documentaries.
00:00 Podcast Intro
00:32 Meet The Hosts
01:21 Chris Fire Ecology Path
02:22 Micah Prescribed Fire Work
03:32 What PBAs Are
03:52 Prescribed Fire History
05:11 PBA Origins And Growth
06:47 How PBAs Form Operate
09:49 Who Can Participate
12:58 Oregon PBAs Impact
17:22 Changing Fire Relationships
20:48 Extension Role In PBAs
24:01 Barriers And Challenges
26:14 Prescribed Fire Roadblocks
26:27 Landowner Research Gaps
27:39 Permits And Capacity Fixes
28:36 Future Of PBAs
30:34 More Fire And Youth Training
31:39 How To Join Or Start
35:39 Volunteer Skills Needed
37:20 Parting Thoughts And Tribal Roots
38:57 Training And Broad Support
41:45 Lightning Round Micah
45:33 Lightning Round Chris
50:00 Wrap Up And Credits

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