DENVER (AP) -- An unusually wet May has reduced the likelihood of wildfires this month across much of the nation, but the danger will increase from July through September, a national outlook says.

Wildfire Outlook US
FILE - In this June 13, 2013 file photo, a volunteer firefighter helps contain a spot fire, in the Black Forest wildfire area, north of Colorado Springs, Colo. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley, file)
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The risk is below normal in a vast area of the central and Southern U.S. in June, but above normal in drought-stricken California, according to June 1 report by the National Interagency Fire Center, which coordinates firefighting nationwide.

Hawaii and parts of the Southwest and Alaska are also at above-normal risk.

As the summer progresses, fire danger is expected to increase across the country, especially in the Northwest, Georgia and the Carolinas. Above-normal temperatures are forecast for most of the West and the Atlantic coast.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and Interior Secretary Sally Jewell will discuss wildfire threats and the nationwide outlook for the wildfire season Tuesday in Denver.

They also will discuss a proposal by President Barack Obama to change the way the government funds wildfire-fighting to ease the strain on the U.S. Forest Service budget.

The worst 1 percent of wildfires eat up about 30 percent of the Forest Service's firefighting budget, they said.

Obama wants to treat the cost of catastrophic fires like other natural disasters, taking money from an existing federal disaster relief fund so the Forest Service doesn't have to tap into other funds designed to improve forest health and reduce future fires.

The Forest Service is part of the Agriculture Department.

The House Appropriations Committee is proposing a budget of $3.6 billion for wildland firefighting and prevention for the fiscal year that starts in October, $52 million more than the current budget, committee spokeswoman Jennifer Hing said Tuesday.

The measure doesn't change the way major fires are paid for. Hing said that would require Congress to revise laws that govern the budget process and disaster recovery spending.

In a report released in August, the Agriculture Department said staffing for fighting fires has more than doubled since 1998 but the number of workers who manage National Forest lands has dropped by about a third.

When the report was made public, Vilsack said rising firefighting costs cut into programs to restore vegetation and watersheds after fires. Programs that help states and private landowners conserve wildlife habitat and maintenance of recreational sites also has suffered, the agriculture secretary said.

Vilsack and Jewell have warned that catastrophic wildfires pose a worsening danger, especially in the West.

 

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