Worcester County MA does not have formal wildfire hazard zones like western states, but the MA Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR) Bureau of Forest Fire Control operates under MGL c. 48 and enforces open burning restrictions. Wildfire risk is moderate in wooded western Worcester County (Petersham, Athol, Phillipston). Open burning season Jan 15 - May 1 only, permit required. Red-flag days trigger statewide burn bans. 780 CMR does not mandate wildland-urban interface standards.
Massachusetts does not designate wildfire hazard zones in the manner of California (CAL FIRE FHSZ) or Colorado. However, wildland fire management is administered by the DCR Bureau of Forest Fire Control under MGL c. 48, §§8-10 with district offices including Worcester County. Wildfire risk is elevated in the wooded western half of Worcester County (Petersham, Athol, Phillipston, Royalston, Templeton, Hubbardston, Barre, Oakham) and in pine barrens areas. Key regulatory frameworks: (1) Open burning permits — MGL c. 48, §13 requires fire warden/chief permit for outdoor brush burning; season limited to January 15 through May 1, hours 10 AM - 4 PM, Class 2/3 brush only, maximum 75 feet from structures; (2) 527 CMR 1.10 (MA Comprehensive Fire Safety Code) governs outdoor fire, Section 30.5 for recreational fires; (3) Red-flag warnings from National Weather Service trigger statewide open-burn bans announced by DCR/State Fire Marshal; (4) Smokey Bear fire danger classification (Low-Extreme) posted at state forests. 780 CMR (state building code) does not currently mandate WUI (wildland-urban interface) construction standards — no requirement for ember-resistant vents, Class A roof assemblies, or defensible space in MA (unlike CA, CO, OR). Voluntary Firewise USA community programs exist in some rural Worcester County towns. Fire department inspections for hazardous conditions available on complaint. State forests (Douglas State Forest, Federated Women's Club State Forest, Wachusett Mountain) are managed by DCR for fuel reduction.
Unpermitted open burning: MGL c. 48, §13 fines up to $500 plus suppression costs; criminal liability if fire escapes. Burning during red-flag ban: similar MGL c. 48 penalties plus 527 CMR 1.10 enforcement. Causing wildfire through negligence: civil liability for suppression (can be hundreds of thousands) plus criminal charges under MGL c. 266, §1.
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