Mountain View Fire and Rescue extends burn ban in Black Diamond through Sept. 9

Mountain View Fire and Rescue (MVFR) is extending the burn ban through Sept. 9.

Mountain View Fire and Rescue (MVFR) is extending the burn ban through Sept. 9.

“Brush and wildland fires utilize a lot of fire department resources and can take days to completely extinguish, Fire Chief Greg Smith said in a press release statement. “We won’t open burning until we have had some appreciable rain. It’s just not worth the risk”.

MVFR’s wildland team has been deployed to fires in other jurisdictions in King and Pierce County in the last week. It has an annual burn ban for “yard vegetation open burning” every year, typically lasting July – Labor Day weekend.

The State Department of Natural Resources has placed the Fire Danger at “HIGH” on the West Side; fuel moisture levels are measured to determine Fire Danger.

Monday marks the 43rd day in a row of dry weather in the Puget Sound region — the forecast calls for warm and dry weather at least until the end of the week. The driest streak in the Seattle area is 51 days, in 1951.

The last rain at Sea-Tic Airport was .04 inches on July 22, marking 43 days and counting. This August has entered the books as the driest August on record.

Recreational Fires utilizing approved fuel and restrictions are not closed.  MVFR asks residents to use extreme caution outdoors during this high fire danger period.

For more information please contact Tim Perciful at tperciful@kcfd44.org or 253-508-7273.