Wildland Fire Management: Improvements Needed in Information, Collaboration, and Planning to Enhance Federal Fire Aviation Program Success
Highlights
What GAO Found
The Department of Agriculture's Forest Service and the Department of the Interior have undertaken nine major efforts since 1995 to identify the number and type of firefighting aircraft they need, but those efforts--consisting of major studies and strategy documents--have been hampered by limited information and collaboration. Specifically, the studies and strategy documents did not incorporate information on the performance and effectiveness of firefighting aircraft, primarily because neither agency collected such data. While government reports have long called for the Forest Service and Interior to collect aircraft performance information, neither agency did so until 2012 when the Forest Service began a data collection effort. However, the Forest Service has collected limited data on large airtankers and no other aircraft, and Interior has not initiated a data collection effort. In addition, although firefighting aircraft are often shared by federal agencies and can be deployed to support firefighting operations on federal and nonfederal lands, the agencies have not consistently collaborated with one another and other stakeholders to identify the firefighting aircraft they need. Many agency officials and stakeholders GAO contacted noted concerns about limited collaboration, and many cited shortcomings with the formal mechanism for collaboration--the National Interagency Aviation Committee. The committee has implemented some leading practices for collaboration such as defining and articulating a common purpose, but it has not taken additional steps to monitor and evaluate its collaborative activities, another leading practice. Collectively, additional information on aircraft performance and effectiveness and collaboration across agencies and with stakeholders could enhance agency estimates of their firefighting aircraft needs to more accurately represent national needs for such aircraft, and as a result, better position the agencies to develop strategic planning documents that represent those needs.
The Forest Service plans to modernize the large airtanker fleet by obtaining large airtankers from various sources over the near, medium, and long term, but each component of this approach faces challenges that make the continued availability of such aircraft to meet national fire suppression needs uncertain. In the near term, the agency plans to rely on a mix of contracted "legacy" airtankers as well as supplemental aircraft available through additional contracts and agreements with other governments and the military. However, agency concerns exist regarding the availability, capability, and costs of these resources. In the medium term, the Forest Service has awarded contracts for "next-generation" large airtankers that are faster and more up-to-date than most "legacy" aircraft, but it is uncertain when all of these aircraft will begin supporting fire suppression activities. Specifically, bid protests delayed contract issuance, and most of the aircraft receiving awards have not been fully tested and approved. In the long term, the Forest Service's plan includes purchasing certain large airtankers and obtaining others through intergovernmental transfer at no initial cost if they are declared surplus by the military--a shift from its long-standing practice of contracting for rather than owning aircraft. However, the Forest Service was unable to justify its previous plans for purchasing large airtankers to the Office of Management and Budget, and concerns exist regarding the retardant capacity and operating cost of the other airtankers it would obtain through intergovernmental transfer.
Why GAO Did This Study
The Forest Service and Interior contract for aircraft to perform various firefighting functions, including airtankers that drop retardant. The Forest Service contracts for large airtankers and certain other aircraft, while Interior contracts for smaller airtankers and water scoopers. However, a decrease in the number of large airtankers, from 44 in 2002 to 8 in early 2013--due to aging planes and several fatal crashes--has led to concerns about the agencies' ability to provide aerial firefighting support.
GAO was asked to review agency efforts to ensure the adequacy of the firefighting aircraft fleet. This report examines (1) Forest Service and Interior efforts to identify the number and type of firefighting aircraft they need and (2) the Forest Service's approach to modernizing the large airtanker fleet and the challenges it faces in doing so. GAO reviewed agency studies and strategies, assessing the extent to which they included key elements important for understanding fire aviation needs; reviewed large airtanker planning and acquisition documents; and interviewed agency officials and representatives of the fire aviation community selected to represent state agencies, aircraft vendors, and others.
Recommendations
GAO recommends, among other things, that the Forest Service and Interior expand efforts to collect information on the performance and effectiveness of firefighting aircraft and enhance collaboration across agencies and the fire aviation community. The agencies generally agreed with GAO's findings and recommendations.
Recommendations for Executive Action
Agency Affected | Recommendation | Status |
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Department of Agriculture | To help the agencies enhance their abilities to identify their firefighting aircraft needs and better ensure they obtain aircraft that meet those needs, the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior should direct the Chief of the Forest Service and the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Safety, Resource Protection, and Emergency Services, respectively, to expand efforts to collect information on aircraft performance and effectiveness to include all types of firefighting aircraft in the federal fleet. |
Through the Aerial Firefighting Use and Effectiveness program, Interior and the Forest Service have expanded efforts to collect data on the use of all types of aircraft in the federal fleet. In turn, the agencies are working to identify variables that influence the effectiveness of firefighting aircraft in meeting specific wildland fire suppression goals.
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Department of the Interior |
Priority Rec.
To help the agencies enhance their abilities to identify their firefighting aircraft needs and better ensure they obtain aircraft that meet those needs, the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior should direct the Chief of the Forest Service and the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Safety, Resource Protection, and Emergency Services, respectively, to expand efforts to collect information on aircraft performance and effectiveness to include all types of firefighting aircraft in the federal fleet.
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Through the Aerial Firefighting Use and Effectiveness program, Interior and the Forest Service have expanded efforts to collect data on the use of all types of aircraft in the federal fleet. In turn, the agencies are working to identify variables that influence the effectiveness of firefighting aircraft in meeting specific wildland fire suppression goals.
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Department of Agriculture | To help the agencies enhance their abilities to identify their firefighting aircraft needs and better ensure they obtain aircraft that meet those needs, the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior should direct the Chief of the Forest Service and the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Safety, Resource Protection, and Emergency Services, respectively, to enhance collaboration between the agencies and with stakeholders in the fire aviation community to help ensure that agency efforts to identify the number and type of firefighting aircraft they need reflect the input of all stakeholders in the fire aviation community. |
Interior and the Forest Service took actions to enhance collaboration across the agencies to ensure that the efforts to identify the number an type of firefighting aircraft needed reflects the input of needs of all stakeholders in the firefighting aviation community. The Forest Service expanded the Aerial Firefighting and Use Effectiveness Study Steering Committee Charter to include representation from Interior and the National Association of State Foresters and committed to working with the vendor community as part of the study. The National Interagency Aviation Committee developed a Communications Plan for the Interagency Aviation Strategy that includes involvement on the part of Interior, the Forest Service, and state governments.
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Department of the Interior | To help the agencies enhance their abilities to identify their firefighting aircraft needs and better ensure they obtain aircraft that meet those needs, the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior should direct the Chief of the Forest Service and the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Safety, Resource Protection, and Emergency Services, respectively, to enhance collaboration between the agencies and with stakeholders in the fire aviation community to help ensure that agency efforts to identify the number and type of firefighting aircraft they need reflect the input of all stakeholders in the fire aviation community. |
Interior and the Forest Service took actions to enhance collaboration across the agencies to ensure that the efforts to identify the number an type of firefighting aircraft needed reflects the input of needs of all stakeholders in the firefighting aviation community. The Forest Service expanded the Aerial Firefighting and Use Effectiveness Study Steering Committee Charter to include representation from Interior and the National Association of State Foresters and committed to working with the vendor community as part of the study. The National Interagency Aviation Committee developed a Communications Plan for the Interagency Aviation Strategy that includes involvement on the part of Interior, the Forest Service, and state governments.
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Department of Agriculture | To help the agencies enhance their abilities to identify their firefighting aircraft needs and better ensure they obtain aircraft that meet those needs, the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior should direct the Chief of the Forest Service and the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Safety, Resource Protection, and Emergency Services, respectively, to, subsequent to the completion of the first two recommendations, update the agencies' strategy documents for providing a national firefighting aircraft fleet to include analysis based on information on aircraft performance and effectiveness and to reflect input from stakeholders throughout the fire aviation community. |
In 2018, the National Interagency Aviation Committee (NIAC) finalized the "Interagency Wildland Fire Management Aviation Strategic Plan - Vision 2027." The plan discusses the importance of information on aircraft performance and effectiveness, but does not include any such information or any associated analysis as specified in our recommendation. As of November 2019, the Forest Service had not provided any information on how, if at all, it planned to incorporate such information and analysis into its strategy documents. As a result, we have closed this recommendation as not implemented.
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Department of the Interior | To help the agencies enhance their abilities to identify their firefighting aircraft needs and better ensure they obtain aircraft that meet those needs, the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior should direct the Chief of the Forest Service and the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Safety, Resource Protection, and Emergency Services, respectively, to, subsequent to the completion of the first two recommendations, update the agencies' strategy documents for providing a national firefighting aircraft fleet to include analysis based on information on aircraft performance and effectiveness and to reflect input from stakeholders throughout the fire aviation community. |
In 2018, the National Interagency Aviation Committee (NIAC) finalized the "Interagency Wildland Fire Management Aviation Strategic Plan - Vision 2027." The plan discusses the importance of information on aircraft performance and effectiveness, but does not include any such information or any associated analysis as specified in our recommendation. As of November 2019, Interior had not provided any information on how, if at all, the agency planned to incorporate such information and analysis into its strategy documents. As a result, we have closed this recommendation as not implemented.
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