SALEM, Ore. — Oregon lawmakers approved $218 million in emergency wildfire funds during a Thursday special session that was convened to address unpaid bills stemming from the state's 2024 record wildfire season.
As wildfires still rage in California, Oregon is among several states grappling with steep costs related to fighting wildfires this year. New Mexico lawmakers in a July special session approved millions in emergency aid for wildfire victims, and states including North Dakota and Wyoming have requested federal disaster declarations to help with recovery costs.
Fighting the blazes that scorched a record 1.9 million acres (769,000 hectares), or nearly 2,970 square miles (7,692 square kilometers), largely in eastern Oregon, cost the state over $350 million, according to Gov. Tina Kotek. The sum has made it the most expensive wildfire season in state history, her office said. While over half of the costs will eventually be covered by the federal government, the state still needs to pay the bills while waiting to be reimbursed.
''We had a historic wildfire season and we didn't have enough money essentially in the bank to pay all of our bills. So as the state of Oregon, it was really important for us to make sure that we paid back those bills, especially as we're going into the holiday season,'' state Sen. Kate Lieber, who co-chairs the joint budget committee, told reporters Thursday.
The emergency funding bill passed with bipartisan support in both chambers, with the state Senate voting 25-2 and the state House voting 42-2 with 15 excused.
''Republicans and Democrats came together because we all agree firefighters deserve to be paid,'' GOP state Rep. Jeff Helfrich said in a news release after the vote. ''This bill delivers for the brave men and women who risked everything to keep our communities safe.''
Oregon wildfires this year destroyed at least 42 homes and burned large swaths of range and grazing land in the state's rural east. At one point, the Durkee Fire, which scorched roughly 460 square miles (1,200 square kilometers) near the Oregon-Idaho border, was the largest in the nation.
Kotek declared a state of emergency in July in response to the threat of wildfire, and invoked the state's Emergency Conflagration Act a record 17 times during the season.