Category Archives: Fire

PG&E Scraps Tree-Trimming Program Once Seen as Key to Fire Prevention

California utility spent more than $2 billion on effort it says was ineffective; focus now is on power-line settings

WSJ News Exclusive | Business
Aug. 2, 2023 5:30 am ET

By Katherine Blunt

PG&E began the so-called enhanced vegetation management in 2019, establishing 12 feet of clearance between branches and power lines.Photo: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg News

The California utility company PG&E spent about $2.5 billion on a yearslong effort aimed at reducing wildfire risk by cutting or clearing more than a million trees growing alongside power lines.

It now says that work was largely ineffective and is eliminating the program, according to an internal analysis reviewed by The Wall Street Journal and interviews with utility executives.

The strategy shift marks a calculated risk by the utility that new power-line settings will be more effective than the tree-trimming program that was put in place after a series of devastating wildfires. The program, which the company called “enhanced vegetation management,” was meant to supplement routine tree-trimming work required by regulators.

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SoCal Edison To Remove 11K Palm Trees Over Wildfire Risk

By CBSLA Staff

SoCal Edison To Remove 11K Palm Trees Over Wildfire Risk

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) – In an effort to mitigate the threat of wildfires, utility giant Southern California Edison announced last week that it will remove 11,000 palm trees which are located too close to its power lines.

FILE — A palm tree burns in a residential area in the Silverado Fire on Oct. 26, 2020, in Irvine, California. (Getty Images)

SCE announced Friday that it will begin removing the palm trees in April. The process will take about two years.

Some cities that will see removals include Simi Valley, Santa Clarita, La Canada Flintridge, Malibu, Lake Elsinore and Santa Ana.

SCE says that removing the palm trees is significantly more effective that trimming them back.

“We are looking to remove these palms to avoid any fires or outages,” SCE vegetation management and forestry manager Jon Pancoast said in a statement. “Trimming this species only stimulates growth, so it’s best to remove this type of vegetation. State regulations require that all types of vegetation should be at least four feet away from power lines in high fire risk areas at all times. We make sure it doesn’t grow back and touch a power line before we’re able to schedule another inspection.”

Palm trees that are located directly under or above power lines will be prioritized because falling fronds can cause outages and fires, SCE said.

SCE notified California state regulators that its equipment may have been to blame for sparking the Silverado Fire, which broke out east of Irvine in late October 2020, burning 13,400 acres and forcing more than 90,000 people to evacuate their homes.

RELATED: Firefighter Injured Battling Silverado Fire Released From Hospital After 17 Surgeries

Also last October, Ventura County fire investigators reported that the Easy and Maria fires, which broke out in October of 2019, were both caused by electrical equipment failures. In the Easy Fire, SCE equipment was to blame, officials said.

In November of 2019, while the Easy and Maria fires were still burning, SCE reached a $360 million settlement admitting that its equipment was also responsible for starting the 2017 Thomas Fire north of Santa Paula and the 2018 Woolsey Fire north of Simi Valley.

READ ARTICLE HERE

California Alliance for Nature says CA Wildfire Budget should save lives and homes first

Following is a letter to California State Legislators from the California Alliance for Nature:

March 12, 2021
California State Legislature
Sacramento, CA

Re: The Proposed Wildfire Budget – Lives and homes first

Dear Honorable Member of the California State Legislature,

The Newsom administration’s new budget proposal to address wildfire risk has, for the first time, allocated funds to support proven strategies that will save lives and protect homes – focusing directly within and around communities at risk to make them fire-safe.
This is a hopeful beginning. However, only 5% of the proposed $1 billion budget will be available to communities to protect themselves from wildfire. The rest, $922 million, is being allocated for plans to fund the clearance of half a million acres of habitat per year including the logging of forests far from most communities at risk – an approach that has consistently failed to protect our neighborhoods from wildfire and will cause significant damage to the natural environments we treasure.1

Primary Goal: Make saving lives and homes the top priority.

Key Metric: Nine out of the 16,909 fires in California during 2017 and 2018 caused 95% of the damage. All nine fires occurred under extreme, wind-driven conditions where vegetation clearance projects proved ineffective. Nearly all the most devastating wildfires in California since the 1991 Oakland Hills Fire exhibit similar characteristics, and most had little to nothing to do with forests. A comprehensive fire management plan must focus on wind-driven fires where most fatalities and READ MORE:

wildfire-budget_lives-and-homes-first

Utilities Declare War on Trees in Name of Fire Safety

from The Arroyo Lookout
by William Kelly

William Kelly is co-publisher of California Currenta weekly news service on the energy utility industry in California and the West. He writes on environmental and energy issues for the Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Inside Climate News, LA Weekly, Scientific American, and Alternet.

READ the full text of article HERE


The trees in this South Pasadena neighborhood were topped by Southern California Edison.

Oaks and other trees in California and along the Arroyo Seco beware!

It’s open season on trees for California’s three major investor-owned utilities. They plan to cut down about 400,000 trees along power lines this year and severely trim others ostensibly to prevent blazes in areas with elevated wildfire risk, which encompass more than 30 percent of the state’s land mass.

And this year’s just the warm up. Utility topping and chopping is planned to continue for the next eight years.


While there’s little question that power lines have sparked large and destructive wildfires, the plans do not rank how effectively the individual measures will actually reduce risk.


The three utilities plan to remove and top trees as part of so-called “enhanced vegetation management” programs outlined to the California Public Utilities Commission as part of wildfire safety plans. The safety plans were filed with the commission early this month in response to last year’s hasty enactment of SB 901 in response to the growing climate change driven danger of wildfires.

The plans, which are required under the law, are targeted for approval by May, according to CPUC President Mike Picker.

They outline a host of steps the utilities plan to undertake at a cost of about $3 billion a year to prevent their power lines from sparking fires. The money is to be collected from utility ratepayers.

A major part of the utility plans will be an intensive eight-year effort to clear any trees that may potentially fall on power lines or top them so they remain below lines. The plans, which contain dozens of separate safety measures, also call for shutting power down when winds blow, insulating lines, strengthening power poles, and putting lines in fire prone areas underground.

Some consumer advocates, like The Utility Reform Network Attorney Marcel Hawiger, fear some of the measures are redundant and could simply drive up what utilities charge ratepayers without commensurate fire risk reduction. The monopoly utilities have motive, they fear, since they’re guaranteed a rate of return, or profit, of about 10 percent on capital expenditures.

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Special Issue Link: 10 Articles on Native Plants and Fire Safety

Read the articles HERE

  • FIRE ON CALIFORNIA LANDSCAPES by Jon E. Keeley
    The California wildfire problem involves wildfire hazards to the urban environment and protection of natural resources. Managing this risk involves fire suppression, changing home construction standards, reducing landscaping fuels, and more serious attention to zoning decisions.
  • HOW CNPS DEVELOPED A POLICY ON NATIVE PLANTS AND FIRE SAFETY by Betsey Landis
    Extensive inquiry and discussion has resulted in a CNPS policy for the state of California that protects native plants, ensures fire safety, and suggests ways to implement it.
  • THE WILDLAND-URBAN INTERFACE FIRE PROBLEM by Jack Cohen
    Homes can survive wildfires without the necessity of wildfire control. But this will require changing our mindset from wildfire exclusion to wildfire compatibility.
  • INTERPRETING FIRE AND LIFE HISTORY INFORMATION IN THE MANUAL OF CALIFORNIA
    VEGETATION by Todd Keeler-Wolf, Julie M. Evens, and John O. Sawyer
    The natural history and fire information in the new edition of A Manual of California Vegetation provides land managers and others with better ways to preserve the state’s natural heritage.
  • INVASIVE SPECIES AND FIRE IN CALIFORNIA ECOSYSTEMS by Adam M. Lambert, Carla M.
    D’Antonio, and Tom L. Dudley
    Although fire is a natural disturbance in many California plant communities, invasive species can alter fire dynamics in ways that are transforming some of these communities.
  • SUSTAINABLE AND FIRE-SAFE LANDSCAPES: ACHIEVING WILDFIRE RESISTANCE AND
    ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH IN THE WILDLAND-URBAN INTERFACE by Sabrina L. Drill
    UC Cooperative Extension, Los Angeles, has developed an educational program to help homeowners create and maintain fire-safe landscaping, while also being good stewards of the land and avoiding the use of invasive plants.
  • THE ROLE OF FIRE SAFE COUNCILS IN CALIFORNIA by Yvonne Everett
    All over California, where communities meet wildlands, citizen groups are working together to help protect their neighborhoods from wildfire. They call themselves Fire Safe Councils.
  • FIRE-RESISTANT LANDSCAPING: A GENERAL APPROACH AND CENTRAL COAST
    PERSPECTIVE by Suzanne Schettler
    Wildfires are capricious and yet there are steps we can take to reduce the risk to a home when designing or retrofitting a landscape setting.
  • WILDFIRE SAFETY: LESSONS LEARNED FROM SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA by Greg Rubin
    It is possible to create defensible space around your home while still embracing the natural ecology that surrounds it. Some pragmatic tips for enhancing fire safety without wholesale environmental destruction.
  • THE MENDOCINO COUNTY FIRE SAFE COUNCIL by Julie Rogers
    From humble beginnings, Fire Safe Councils such as this one in Mendocino County are helping communities “survive and thrive” in wildfire-prone environments.

 

Wildfire is inevitable, but the destruction of our communities is not

A 36-unit apartment complex is reduced to rubble after the Camp fire in Paradise, California on Nov. 30. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

https://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-halsey-firesafe-20181211-story.html

What does prevent house ignition is fairly simple, and compared with the cost of destructive fires, relatively inexpensive.

Our current approach to wildfire is killing us. Instead of making communities fire safe, we’re mostly trying to manage habitat to suppress fire, and it’s failing to protect our lives and our property. Bureaucratic inertia and hubris are preventing needed change. Until the public understands the true nature of wildfire and demands the same of government, the staggering losses will continue to mount.

The sad fact is that strategies capable of preventing much of the devastation in Paradise and Malibu have been known for nearly two decades. But instead of pursuing those strategies, our wildfire agencies stubbornly pursue fire control. A case in point: After the massive fires of 2017 in Santa Rosa and in Ventura County, the state Legislature stepped in with this response: More money to increase logging and prescribed burns in forests far from where the fires occurred and far from communities with substantial populations.

As Jack Cohen, a former lead fire scientist with the U.S. Forest Service, has demonstrated through decades of study, extreme, uncontrollable wildfires are inevitable, but wildland-urban wildfire disasters are not. To stop those disasters, we must accept some basic principles based on experience and research. First among them is that the wildfire problem is a home ignition problem, not a wildfire control problem.

What does prevent house ignition is fairly simple, and compared with the cost of destructive fires, relatively inexpensive.

Embers are the biggest threat. Most structures ignite from embers that can travel a mile or more from the fire front in high winds. Of the 1,650 structures destroyed in the 2007 Witch Creek fire in San Diego County, there were few, if any, reports of homes that burned as a result of direct contact with flames from wildland fuels. Although 100 feet of defensible space around structures is a worthwhile effort, the nearly exclusive focus by wildfire agencies on other kinds of habitat clearance — creating huge fire breaks and logging — isn’t going to prevent wind-driven embers from setting communities on fire.

What does prevent house ignition is fairly simple, and compared with the cost of destructive fires, relatively inexpensive: Retrofitting houses or requiring that new houses be built with such measures as ember-resistant attic vents, nonflammable roofing (not Spanish-style tile roofs, which can trap embers in the spaces beneath the rounded tiles), and exterior sprinklers. The effectiveness of such sprinklers was proved during the 2007 wind-driven Ham Lake fire in Cook County, Minn., where they had been installed on 188 properties. Those properties survived; more than 100 neighboring properties didn’t. Federal Emergency Management Agency hazard mitigation grants had covered the majority of the cost of the sprinklers.

Unfortunately, most wildfire agencies have shown little interest in Cohen’s research. Despite the fact that one of the main goals of U.S. Forest Service vegetation clearance is to protect homes from wildfires, the agency rejects addressing home flammability because it is beyond the “official scope” of the projects. Similarly, after nearly 18 years of scientific input showing that the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection’s Vegetation Treatment Program isn’t protecting homes from wind-driven fires, the agency refuses to change direction. In a recent Community Wildfire Protection Plan in Santa Barbara County, the only attempt to address home ignition is the suggested production of an educational brochure.

Making homes fire safe acknowledges that we must coexist with fire. But coexistence doesn’t preclude evacuation. Experience shows us that it too needs to be reconsidered. We have known since the 2003 Cedar fire in San Diego County that a large percentage of civilian fatalities occur when people are trying to evacuate during huge, wind-driven conflagrations. Such fires move too fast, warning systems often fail, people panic and the fire overtakes jammed roads.

Poor land planning makes the problem worse. Last summer, the San Diego County Board of Supervisors approved a new housing development in a known fire corridor, with only one way out. Paradise, with only a few roads in and out, had narrowed the main route through the town. These planning failures must be resolved with statewide standards.

Paradise also serves as an example of an alternative approach to evacuation. As the Los Angeles Times reported, heroic first responders “shepherded” evacuees from the gridlocked roadway to a concrete parking lot that was somewhat sheltered from the wind. They saved the lives of 150 people. Every housing development in a high-fire hazard area needs to have such a safety zone, a “fire park.” The Eureka Springs development in Escondido provides a model, a purpose-built large, grassy area that’s easy for everyone in the community to get to.

Every community should consider one more strategy that acknowledges our need to live with fire: forming Community Emergency Response Teams with a dedicated group of specially trained volunteers who stay behind expressly to help stranded people and to extinguish ember-ignited spot fires.

We must focus on why and how our communities burn. Protecting homes and families is not about controlling wildfire, but reducing the flammable condition of our communities and making sure new ones are not built in harm’s way.

Richard W. Halsey is director of the California Chaparral Institute.

Why are California’s homes burning? It isn’t natural disaster—it’s bad planning


Flames consume a home as a wildfire burns in Ojai, Calif., on Dec. 7. (Noah Berger / Associated Press)

We need to recognize that fire disasters aren’t natural, they’re social. And they require social solutions.


Dec 07, 2017

Large, high-intensity wildfires are an inevitable and natural part of life in California. The destruction of our communities is not. But many of the political leaders we elect and planning agencies we depend upon to create safe communities have failed us. They have allowed developers to build in harm’s way, and left firefighters holding the bag.

The fires raging in Los Angeles County and Ventura are an urgent signal that we need to start asking the hard questions — about the true cost of expanding the local tax base with new residences in high fire hazard zones. We need to stop having the same conversation over and over again, a conversation laced with non-sequiturs and focused on outdated, ineffective solutions. The devastating loss of life, the destruction of so many family homes, and the dangers faced by those who protect us demand nothing less.

Some blame the current rash of wildfires on dead trees in forests—even if those fires are nowhere near a forest, or dead trees. (Members of Congress seem to have bought this explanation and they’re now pushing a bill sponsored by Rep. Bruce Westerman [R-Ark.] that would encourage more logging in the West.) Some blame climate change, claiming, for example, that rising temperatures are responsible for the devastating Tubbs fire in Santa Rosa in October — despite the fact that a bigger and just as fierce fire burned much of the same area in 1964. (Climate change is making our fire seasons worse, but it isn’t responsible for every big fire.) Yet others blame firefighters for creating dense stands of chaparral in fire suppression efforts—when that’s the only way chaparral naturally grows, dense and impenetrable.

We need to recognize that fire disasters aren’t natural, they’re social. And they require social solutions.

The standard procedure to reduce wildfire risk is to clear habitat. We have spent millions of dollars doing this for nearly a century. Nevertheless, our homes keep burning. That’s because while vegetation management such as fuel breaks and prescribed burns can help during non-extreme fire events, they do little to suppress extreme events. But if anyone questions vegetation management in the backcountry, the typical response is that the projects will work as designed for 90th percentile weather conditions. That’s absurd. Imagine if we designed buildings to withstand only 95th percentile earthquake movements, or what you would feel as a result of a magnitude 2.5. We need to protect communities from fires that actually do the damage.

How do we do this? As University of Colorado geographer Gregory Simon has observed, since we are choosing to spread cities farther and farther out into wildland areas, we need to recognize that fire disasters aren’t natural, they’re social. And they require social solutions.

Planning agencies need to push back against pro-development forces in government, whose willingness to build in known fire corridors borders on criminal neglect. The recent devastation of the community of Fountaingrove in Santa Rosa, for example, was both horrible and predictable. (The area has now burned twice in 53 years.) Local leaders need to restrict development in such areas.

In the smaller picture, local governments need to impose strict fire codes in new communities throughout California, require older communities to retrofit their properties, and enforce proper defensible space regulations. That means 100 feet of thinned vegetation, not bare ground. Hundreds of feet of bare ground make a home the target for wind-driven embers.

Such policies would cost significantly less than the $9.4 billion wildfire-related claims submitted statewide as of Friday.

We also need to examine the best practices of other fire-prone regions. Communities in Australia often install external, under-eave/rooftop sprinklers, which have proven quite effective in protecting structures during wildfires. (Australians understand that wet homes do not ignite.) Such systems should be standard in all new developments in high fire hazard zones. It is likely they would have protected many of the homes consumed in Ventura’s Thomas fire this week.

Agencies like Cal Fire need to begin addressing the question, “How do we protect lives and property?” rather than “How can we stop a wildfire?” Right now, Cal Fire is focused on the latter, with its misguided Vegetation Treatment Program. A focus on the former would mean at least noting land-use problems in planning documents. It would mean spending as much time and money on helping people retrofit homes as they do on vegetation treatments. Communities including Idyllwild and Big Bear have taken advantage of FEMA pre-disaster grants to replace flammable roofing and install ember-resistant vents. Such long-term solutions, unlike fuel breaks, do not require costly maintenance.

Trees, shrubs, grasses or homes will all provide the necessary fuel for a wildfire. It’s part of California’s story. As we do with earthquakes and floods, our goal should be to reduce the damage when wildfires arrive, not pretend we can prevent them from happening at all. That mindset starts at the planning department, not the fire station.

Richard Halsey is the director of the California Chaparral Institute.

Rebecca Latta Team Consults on Fire Damaged Trees

The Woolsey Fire, California. US Forest Service photo courtesy of Peter Buschmann

HEAT, DROUGHT and CLIMATE CHANGE
Rebecca Latta and her team serve as trusted advisors to owners of trees and landscapes stressed by heat, drought, fire and the effects of climate change. Her team reviews properties to determine strategies to protect trees and plants by planning and modifying the landscaped environment. Property owners learn how to encourage landscapes to heal by such techniques as post-fire seeding, allowing damaged plants to sprout from the base, and selecting alternative heat- and drought-tolerant varieties. Rebecca’s team can assist with resource information about landscape restoration and planting new sustainable gardens that are better suited to the coming changes in the climate.

FIRE DAMAGE
If you have fire-damaged trees or landscaping, our professional evaluation provides you with guidance to transition your garden to health. Rebecca and her crew survey and assess trees and landscapes, and work with local government agencies to coordinate any permits required to remove or restore damaged trees and vegetation. Our assessment can determine if fire damaged trees should remain or be removed. Fire damaged trees can provide value to wildlife, serving as as roosts for birds and homes for animals. Downed trees and burned plants also decompose, enriching the soil to allow new trees and plants to thrive.