After last year’s devastating and tragic fire season, the NSW Rural Fire Service (NSW RFS) are doing their best to prevent the same thing happening again in 2020/2021.
The RFS has announced that six Local Government Areas (LGAs) will commence the Bush Fire Danger Period (BFDP) from August 1, due to prevailing local conditions.
NSW RFS Commissioner Rob Rogers said the six LGAs that will enter the BFDP from 1 August 2020 are Armidale Regional, Walcha, Uralla, Glen Innes Severn, Inverell and Tenterfield.
‘While an early fire season is not unusual in these areas, increased grass growth due to recent rain could prove problematic over coming weeks and months,’ said Commissioner Rogers.
Increased grass growth
‘Landholders and firefighters are reporting increased grass growth, particularly west of the divide. Once dry or cured this will bring an unwelcome threat of grass fires.
‘Grass fires can be especially dangerous because they start quickly and spread rapidly, destroying not only homes and stock, but also lives and livelihoods.
During the Bush Fire Danger Period, landowners and managers are required to obtain a Fire Permit from their local Fire Control Centre before lighting any fires, including hazard reduction burns.
Start preparing for the threat of bush and grass fire
Commissioner Rogers said now is the time for residents and land managers to start preparing for the threat of bush and grass fire.
‘Last season was unprecedented, in terms of area burnt, lives lost and homes destroyed,’ Commissioner Rogers said.
‘We cannot be complacent coming in to this season thinking that we won’t see fire activity again.
‘Bush and grass fires can strike at any time and it is vitally important to be prepared.
‘This means doing simple things like cleaning your gutters, removing combustibles from your yard, ensuring hoses can reach all corners of your property and completing or updating your bush fire survival plan, so you and your family know what you will do in the event of a bush fire.
Update bush fire survival plan
‘I encourage households to update their bush fire survival plan and make sure the whole family knows what to do when faced with a fire. It could save your lives.
‘Ask yourself, when you will go, what you will take and where will you go.’
Information about hazard reduction burning, required notifications and obtaining fire permits is available on the NSW RFS website at www.rfs.nsw.gov.au/BFDP.


For four decades The Echo has printed the stories some people loved, some people hated, and some pretended not to read. If you want us to keep telling the truth, the real truth, not the sugar-coated version. We’ll need your support to keep the presses rolling.