United States Reaches $1,275,000 Settlement With Power Company For Beaver Fire
DENVER The United States has reached a settlement with the San Miguel Power Association to pay $1,275,000 for damages incurred by the United States in suppressing the Beaver Fire, announced Matt Kirsch, Attorney for the United States, acting under authority conferred by 28 U.S.C. § 515.
The Beaver Fire was a wildland fire that ignited on May 22, 2010, when two cottonwood trees fell across an electrical power line owned and operated by San Miguel Power. The fire burned approximately 2,600 acres of public and National Forest System lands near Norwood, in San Miguel County, Colorado. The United States incurred substantial costs in suppressing the fire.
The settlement resolves the United States allegations that the fire was caused by San Miguel Power Associations failure to properly inspect the area adjacent to its power lines. The United States alleges that the trees that fell across the line were visibly decayed and should have been identified as hazards and removed prior to the ignition of the Beaver Fire. The United States position is that the San Miguel Power Association failed to properly train its employees and contractors and failed to put in place an adequate procedure or program to identify decayed trees that pose a fire risk. The San Miguel Power Association denies all liability or wrongdoing for causing the fire.
Todays recovery helps offset the financial cost to the public of fire suppression, said BLM Colorado State Director Jamie Connell. On behalf of the many firefighters who worked on these and other fires in the West, we appreciate a resolution that benefits the public, the publics land, and the multiple uses public lands support in Colorado.
Read more: https://www.justice.gov/usao-co/pr/united-states-reaches-1275000-settlement-power-company-beaver-fire