Agenda

Webinar instructions will be emailed before the date of the webinar.

Wildfire Management on Rural Lands
Monday, December 14, 2020 | 10:00 am – 5:00 pm CST (incl. 30 min. break)


Wildfire Science and History           J. Bailey

History of wildfire in the American
West Causes and effects of wildfire
Effect of fire on built environment
Land use planning
Federal, state and local fire planning

Creating Resilient Landscapes           J. Bailey
Managing vegetation
Managing fuels

Adapting Communities to Fire Risks           D. Lasky, M. Matonis, C. Marshall
Reducing possibilities for ignition
Reducing fuel          
Protecting community assets
Community Wildfire Protection Plans (CWPP)

Responding to Wildfires            D. Lasky
Responding safely and efficiently to fire Structure protection
Strategies to limit spread of fire Public safety concerns

 

Webinar Instructions
All
attendees must log-on through their own email – attendees may not watch together if they wish
to earn continuing education credit. HalfMoon Education Inc. must be able to prove attendance if
either the attendee or HalfMoon Education Inc. is audited.

Certificates of completion will be available for download and printing upon completion of a followup quiz with at least 80% accuracy.

Webinars are presented via GoToWebinar, an easy-to-use application that can be run on most
systems and tablets. Instructions and login information will be provided in an email sent close
to the date of the webinar. It is highly recommended that you download, install and test the
application before the webinar begins by clicking on the link in
the email.

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Google Chrome OS, Android OS 5 (Lollipop) – Android 9 (Pie), iOS 10 – iOS 12, Windows Phone 8+,
Windows 8RT+

Web browser: The two most recent versions of Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox
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Hardware: 2GB of RAM (minimum), 4GB or more of RAM (recommended)
For more information visit the “Support” section at www.gotowebinar.com.

Credits

Professional Engineers:
6.0 PDHs

Landscape Architects:
6.0 HSW CE Hours

LA CES:  (LA CES credits only available for attending live Webinar.)
6.0 HSW PDHs

Foresters:
6.0 SAF Cat1 Hours

Planners:
6.0 CM | 6


Continuing Education Credit Information
This webinar offers 6.0 PDHs to professional engineers and licensed in all states. It offers
6.0 HSW continuing education hours to landscape architects in most states.

HalfMoon Education is an approved continuing education sponsor for engineers in Florida
(Provider No. 0004647), Indiana (License No. CE21700059), Maryland, New Jersey
(Approval No. 24GP00000700), North Carolina (S-0130), and North Dakota. HalfMoon
Education is deemed an approved continuing education sponsor for New York engineers,
architects, and landscape architects via its registration with the American Institute of
Architects Continuing Education System (Regulations of the Commissioner §68.14(i)(2),
§69.6(i)(2), § and 79-1.5(i)(2)). Courses approved by the AIA/CES qualify for Florida and
New Jersey architects. Other states do not preapprove continuing education providers or
courses.

This course has been approved by the Landscape Architect Continuing Education System
for 6.0 HSW PDHs. Only full participation is reportable to the AIA/CES and LA CES.

The Society of American Foresters has approved this course for 6.0 Cat1 hours.
This course is approved by the American Planner Association AICP for CM | 6.0 for
Certified Planners.

Completion certificates will be awarded to participants who complete this event, respond
to prompts, and earn a passing score (80%) on the quiz that follows the presentation
(multiple attempts allowed).

Speakers

John Bailey

John Bailey is a professor of Silviculture and Fire Management in the College of Forestry at Oregon State University. He obtained his BS and MF degrees from Virginia Tech in the 1980s, then he worked for 6+ years with the Environmental Protection Agency in Corvallis, Oregon, on forest stressors. He completed a PhD degree at Oregon State University and joined the faculty at Northern Arizona University in 1996, where he worked in ponderosa pine silviculture, fuels management and ecological restoration. Professor Bailey returned to OSU in 2006 to continue research on fuels/fire management and sustainable forestry in drier fire-prone forest types, as well as multi-story management in mixed forest types for broad ecosystem objectives. His recent research and outreach focus is on landscape-scale wildfire risk and how to use sustainable forest management to minimize the adverse impacts of future wildfire in uncertain climatic times.

Dave Lasky

Dave Lasky is the director of Fire Management for the Forest Stewards Guild and the module lead for the Gravitas Peak Wildland Fire Module, and he has spent 20 years in fire management. He has worked as a suppression firefighter with extensive experience in Colorado’s Front Range and its recent history of catastrophic fires in the Wildland Urban Interface (WUI). Mr. Lasky has had a diverse career, from running Daylight Again Restoration Forestry, which used draft horses as the motive power source, to many years as an engine boss, and serving on Type 2 and 3 Incident Management Teams. He spent thre years as the lead for the Four Mile Fire Crew, working with landowners and state and federal partners to build fire resilient communities. A qualified burn boss and incident commander, Mr. Lasky now focuses on workforce development and social justice issues to increase the pace and scale of prescribed fire implementation.

Corrina Marshall

Corrina Marshall is the Intermountain west regional coordinator with the Forest Stewards Guild. She project manages several next generation community wildfire protection plans that the Guild is developing. She has extensive experience in private working lands conservation across the West and Midwest. Her career spans the gap from prescribed fire and ecological restoration implementation projects to community engagement with federal, state, non-profit, and private partners.

Megan Matonis

Megan Matonis, PhD. is the Intermountain West regional manager with the Forest Stewards Guild. Having previously worked at the Rocky Mountain Research Station and with Colorado State Forest Service, Dr. Matonis has significant research and outreach experience in fire ecology, forest ecology, and fire management. Her dissertation research focuses on collaborative landscape-scale restoration of ponderosa pine and dry mixed-conifer forests along the Colorado Front Range and Uncompahgre Plateau. Notably, Dr. Matonis is a coauthor on a highly-regarded general technical report on restoration treatments in ponderosa pine forests.