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Fire

How to report a fire:

If you have an emergency, please call 911.

The Shasta-Trinity National Forest, in conjunction with numerous other state, county, and local fire control organizations, maintains a constant state of readiness for incident response.  If you believe you’ve spotted a new fire, and/or want to report a fire, please call 911. They will notify and dispatch the appropriate personnel.

Fire on the Shasta-Trinity National Forest

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The Shasta-Trinity National Forest has a diverse Fire and Aviation Management program that is strongly committed to the management of all aspects of wildland fire operations. In addition to initial and extended attack of wildland fires, this includes planning, fuels management, prescribed burning, prevention, suppression, and using state-of-art tools and technology in dynamic and changing environments. We are proud to be a part of the largest wildland firefighting force in the world.

We stand behind the agency's top priority to maintain and improve the health, diversity, and productivity of forest ecosystems for the enjoyment of current and future generations. We are enthusiastic about reducing hazardous fuels, improving forest health, and returning fire to our ecosystem in a deliberate and dedicated manner.

The Shasta-Trinity National Forest Fire and Aviation Management Program maintains strong relationships with collaborators and partners, including international, federal, tribal, state, and local agencies. In addition, Fire and Aviation Management personnel work with all resource areas—biology, archaeology, timber, wildlife, lands and minerals, and range–to address the many challenges that come with managing wildland fire and fuels in a fire-adapted ecosystem.

InciWeb

Stay informed about wildfires and natural disasters by visiting InciWeb. Click the button below for real-time updates, safety information, and resources to help you prepare and respond.

AirNow Fire and Smoke Map

This map shows observed air quality conditions based on fine scale particulate (PM2.5) concentrations, as well as fire locations from incidents and satellite detections, and smoke plumes detected by satellites.

Last updated July 20th, 2025