Stop California Burning!

Stop California Burning!

The California Board of Forestry is currently preparing to adopt an update to California’s Fire Safe Regulations. If adopted, the current draft will NOT stop California from burning. Instead, the new regulations will undermine California’s efforts to solve the growing housing crisis by preventing new fire safe homes from being constructed.

The State Fire Marshal’s own fire statistics demonstrate that homes built to California’s current Building Code Chapter 7A, which established construction standards to protect life and property for buildings located in the wildland urban interface, or WUI. These standards have proven to increase the ability for buildings to resist the intrusion of flames and embers, significantly reducing the fire risk to homes built in the WUI. And, when those homes are built as part of a “master planned community” where all the homes are built to these standards, the risk is almost non-existent.

Master planned communities are fire hardened. They are typically designed with homes built of ignition resistant materials, good fire access and evacuation routes, good water supply, residential fire sprinklers, undergrounded utilities, strong defensible space, green belting with slope and ridge reductions to minimize fire spread, landscaping and fire-resistant plant species restrictions, and Homeowner Associations (HOA’s) to provide maintenance for all the fire safety provisions. In addition, master planned communities typically add new fire stations, fire equipment, and more firefighters to provide for a rapid initial fire attack where it didn’t previously exist.

With all the news about California wildfires over the past 15 years it has gone unreported that no “master planned community” built after the adoption of California Building Code Chapter 7A has suffered any significant loss.

The overwhelming evidence is that the wildland fire problem comes from the existing stock of homes built prior to fire safe building codes in high-risk fire prone areas. These are homes built in the WUI and are typically overgrown by many drought-ridden fuel types (brush, shrubs, trees, etc.) that are ready to burn rapidly. Many have narrow roads, inadequate fire access and evacuation routes, and inadequate water supplies. Nearby power lines ready to drop in high wind conditions along with steep slopes and inaccessible terrain complicate the fire problem.

Solving the California wildfire problem will require statewide retrofitting of homes with fire resistant materials and the maintenance of defensible space within entire communities in high fire severity zones. Individual homes that are retrofitted among a group of non-retrofitted homes only slightly improves their chances of survival.

The Board of Forestry Fire Safe Regulations does nothing to address this main California wildfire problem. Rather, the new regulations will hamper or stop new fire safe master planned communities from being developed. Over time, as more of the older non-retrofitted communities are lost to wildfire, added pressure to the California housing crisis will continue to grow.

The California wildfire problem did not happen overnight. It will not be resolved quickly. However, we must focus on retrofitting entire communities in high fire severity zones to be fire safe, as well as build new master planned communities if we are ever to resolve the wildfire problem and housing crisis. The Board of Forestry must recognize this reality. Absent that, California will keep burning!

Robert (Dale) Barnett

RDB Consulting, Emergency Management and Fire Service Training

2 年

Chief Grijalva, thanks for your leadership in changing the face of Cal Fire. Your words speak volumes to an ongoing issue. Appreciate your involvement!

Phil Kleinheinz

Fire Chief (Retired) City of Santa Clara

2 年

Excellent article. Right on the money.

Clive Savacool

Founder & CEO of LogRx Narcotics Tracking Software I Retired Fire Chief I Lifelong Paramedic

2 年

This is one of the most important topics in California fire service. Thanks for bringing it to the forefront.

Dan Reese

Helping the world understand wildfire resilience, prevention, and mitigation || Wildfire chemicals || Wildfire prevention technologies || Aerial firefighting & fleet development

2 年

"The California wildfire problem did not happen overnight. It will not be resolved quickly." Agreed, the Chief makes great points here. I would add that appropriate allocations of the resources proven to work right now need to be better balanced across all land management and fire protection agencies. Wildfire occurs regardless of boundaries and jurisdictions, which are vast. The lack of accountability, cohesive planning, funding, and approach needs to be addressed across the nation. As our environment is evolving, we have neglected to change with it. The fire service is steeped in tradition, making change difficult. When combined with the glacial pace of change in fractured government agencies and oversight, political agendas, and environmental law, this lack of change is spot lighted by the current wildfire predicament. It is complex, but we can do better

Francesca Venezia

Leadership | Growth Management | Sales | Business Development | Results-Driven Storyteller | Brand Marketing | Business Analytics | Design Thinking | Business Strategy | Board Management | Girl & Dog Mom

2 年

Great story - living in this high fire prone state is challenging. I back up to open space and my insurance carrier of 22 years dropped our coverage.

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