City of Swan Bushfire Volunteers to conduct the largest volunteer managed burn ever conducted by the City

Published on: Friday, May 08, 2026
City of Swan Bushfire Volunteers to conduct the largest volunteer managed burn ever conducted by the City
Image: A firefighter in yellow protective gear stands near low flames and smoke during a controlled bushfire burn.
City of Swan volunteer bushfire brigades are set to conduct the largest hazard reduction burn ever undertaken by the City of Swan bushfire services.

The burn is a tenure-blind strategic burn in the Avon Valley, encompassing approximately 350 hectares across multiple land tenures, including Australian Wildlife Conservancy’s Paruna Wildlife Sanctuary, private landholdings, and City of Swan land. 

Pending appropriate weather forecasts, the burn is set to commence on Friday, May 8, and will continue for several days. The forecasted steady dry weather provides optimal conditions to disperse smoke causing minimal impact on build-up areas. 

A tenure blind burn is where a burn is planned and carried out based on landscape risk and fuel loads, rather than the ownership (tenure) of the land. It treats public land – for example, national parks - private property and Council land as a single, cohesive area to maximise bushfire protection for communities and infrastructure. The concept was a key recommendation of the 2011 Perth Hills Bushfires Inquiry. 

Tanya Richardson, City of Swan Mayor, said the burn is of high strategic value, not just to the City but also to the State. 

“Conducting the hazard reduction burn across multiple tenure as a single, cohesive area maximise the strategic protection for communities, environment and infrastructure,” she said.

“The east-west rail corridor traverse through the Avon Valley. It is the sole rail line connecting Western Australia with the Eastern States and significant amounts of food and materials are transported through the corridor into Western Australia each day. Extended disruption to the east-west rail corridor could quickly cause statewide and national logistical challenges.

“The burn will also protect pristine Avon Valley ecosystems by reducing the risk for large devastating landscape fires.

“Taking risk-reduction action now to protect these vital assets is a priority for the City of Swan.”
 
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