Wyoming Man and His Insurers to Pay $2.9M for 2012 Wildfire

October 5, 2015

A man who accidentally started a 2012 wildfire that burned over a mountain and threatened the town of Jackson has agreed to a $2.9 million payment under a legal settlement.

James G. Anderson Jr., 79, will be responsible for $425,000. Insurance companies State Farm and Mountain West Farm Bureau will pick up the rest, the U.S. attorney’s office for Wyoming announced in late September.

The money will reimburse the federal and state governments for firefighting costs and damages.

The agreement came three years to the week after the Horsethief Canyon Fire burned 5 square miles of forest and threatened to burn into Jackson. For a time, 1,000 Jackson residents were advised to be ready to leave at a moment’s notice.

Lightning, not people, causes most wildfires in the West. Holding a person financially responsible for an accidental wildfire is especially unusual.

Investigators determined the fire started when Anderson was burning twigs and paper in a rusty barrel at his son’s home. Flames spread from the rusted-out bottom of the barrel.

Anderson told investigators he had been watching football and called 911 after he saw smoke outside through a garage window, according to the investigation report.

The U.S. Forest Service sent Anderson a bill for $6.3 million in 2013. The amount Anderson and his insurer will pay is less.

Topics Catastrophe Carriers Natural Disasters Wildfire

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Insurance Journal Magazine October 5, 2015
October 5, 2015
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