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Forecast, monitor, adapt: A multi-agency strategy to protect people from postfire debris flows

August 1, 2025

In 2020, a wildfire burned across Glenwood Canyon in Colorado, USA. A history of postfire debris flows in the region and a hazard assessment for the burn area indicated that potentially life-threatening debris flows could be triggered by rainfall within months of a wildfire. As a result, four government agencies evaluated strategies to help mitigate hazards, including the loss of human life, that may be associated with debris-flow events. After the fire, 26 large debris flows occurred in the summer of 2021 and three sediment-laden flows occurred in the summer of 2023, but there were no major injuries or fatalities reported. We found that integrating hazard assessment/ forecasting, monitoring, and adaptation scenarios was a successful strategy for reducing postfire debris-flow risks to human life (including injuries and fatalities). Weather forecasts and estimates of debris-flow triggering rainfall thresholds, likelihood, and volume were used to anticipate the timing, location, and magnitude of debris-flow events. Rainfall monitoring and detailed recordkeeping of storms that triggered debris flows were used to validate and update debris-flow warning thresholds that varied with time following the wildfire. Although the governmental agencies working in this burn area had distinct and differing agency mandates, they were able to integrate information to reduce the risk of debris-flow events to human life.

Publication Year 2025
Title Forecast, monitor, adapt: A multi-agency strategy to protect people from postfire debris flows
DOI 10.1130/GSATG611A.1
Authors Francis Rengers, Jason Kean, Cory Williams, Mark Henneberg, John Banta, Eric Schroder, Cara Sponaugle, David Callery, Erin Walter, Todd Blake, Dennis Staley
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title GSA Today
Index ID 70269827
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geologic Hazards Science Center - Landslides / Earthquake Geology
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