
Frame from "HTRA-260505-1300" · Source
House panel holds wildfire evacuation bill over cost, scope concerns
The House Transportation Committee held legislation Tuesday that would require the state to prioritize maintenance of roads and airports in wildfire-prone areas to ensure evacuation routes remain functional. Lawmakers raised concerns about potentially massive implementation costs and unclear scope.
House Bill 317, sponsored by Representative Ky Holland, would direct the Department of Transportation and Public Facilities to develop a long-term plan for maintaining facilities in areas at risk of wildfire. The committee substitute adopted Tuesday expanded the bill beyond the original wildland urban interface definition to include all areas designated for critical or full wildfire response by the Division of Forestry. It added airports as evacuation facilities alongside roads.
The planning phase alone would cost $73,000 according to DOT's fiscal note. Full implementation could exceed $100 million statewide. Andy Mills, legislative liaison for DOT, told the committee that a recent project on the Old Glen Highway cost $1 million to clear vegetation along just a few miles of road.
Representative Kevin McCabe questioned whether the Department of Natural Resources, rather than DOT, should handle wildfire mitigation work. "I continue to believe that this is a DNR responsibility, not a DOT responsibility," McCabe said. He asked whether federal grants might be available for forest fire mitigation that could help fund the work.
The bill would apply to state-owned facilities, including 237 state-owned airports and approximately 5,600 center lane miles of roads. Mills explained that DOT would overlay its geographic information systems with DNR datasets to identify where roads and airports intersect with wildfire risk areas.
Mills noted that DOT already maintains clear zones around airports under Federal Aviation Administration requirements. The department works with DNR in a support capacity during active wildfire events by managing communications, restricting access, and rerouting traffic. The bill would impose new obligations by requiring DOT to develop a long-term maintenance plan specifically prioritizing wildfire-prone areas and to establish a framework for ongoing vegetation management along evacuation routes, rather than responding only during active fire events.
Holland explained that the bill emerged from difficulties his community group encountered trying to clear vegetation along state roads. "What we ran into was the DOT in their right-of-way requires that if you are going to do work in that area, you have got to get a permit from them. And that permit process takes time and money to do that," Holland said.
The bill would require DOT to consult with tribal entities and other organizations as it develops its prioritization framework. No representatives from these groups testified at Tuesday's hearing. The bill would also direct the department to prioritize facilities that support communities with only one means of egress.
This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.
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