/ Modified aug 6, 2018 12:13 p.m.

Forest Thinning, Burning Project OK'd to Protect Reservoir

The plan is aimed at preventing severe fire, erosion and flooding.

C.C. Cragin Reservoir Spring snowmelt in C.C. Cragin Reservoir, 2017.
Deborah Lee Soltesz, USFS

FLAGSTAFF — A newly authorized project calls for forest thinning and prescribed fires to protect watersheds that feed a reservoir serving the city of Payson in east-central Arizona.

Coconino National Forest officials recently announced the 100-square-mile project. They say the work around C.C. Cragin Reservoir will help protect the water source, wildlife habitat and infrastructure from severe fire, erosion and flooding.

Severe fire creates heat that scorches soil, causing precipitation to flow across the ground rather than be absorbed by it.

Plans call for a combination of mechanical and hand thinning methods with prescribed burns over several years.

Officials say the work could begin as early as this fall.

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