Commission weighs altering burn‑season schedule, considers stage‑1 restrictions amid early green‑up

Duchesne County Commission · March 23, 2026

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Summary

County fire official and commissioners discussed moving or adjusting burn‑season dates and using stage‑1 restrictions earlier than usual because of a dry start to the season and recent fires; staff recommended retaining flexible authority for the fire warden and emergency management director to set days.

Duchesne County officials reviewed current fuel and moisture conditions and discussed whether to adjust the county's burn‑season dates or rely on flexible, event‑driven restriction days.

A county fire official (Speaker 7) described conditions as a moderate drought but noted vegetation and fuels were greening earlier than usual. He suggested a flexible approach that could allow limited controlled burns in the near term to give residents time to clean ditches and reduce fuels, or to set a specific date (for example, April 15) to close the season for permitted burns.

"If we could bump that for, let's say, 20 fifth, starting Wednesday... and then give them 3 weekends... and on April 15, shutting in," the official said, summarizing a possible phased approach to allow some controlled burns before a final closure date. He also noted that permits and inspections would still be required and that staff would be busy checking burn sites.

Commissioners and staff noted the county's ordinance currently lists burn season dates (March 1 through May 30 and November 1) and suggested either changing fixed dates in the ordinance or leaving the dates out and relying on the fire warden and emergency management director to set restriction days based on conditions. Staff said the commission already has authority to set restrictions and that the challenge is public notification.

The commission discussed coordinating with neighboring counties to keep rules consistent and acknowledged that state or neighboring counties might set earlier dates, which would affect local activity.

Next steps: staff will draft possible language options (retain dates, adjust dates, or rely on flexible triggers) and consider public‑notification strategies; no ordinance change was adopted at the meeting.