Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Groups join to protect Inland Empire from danger of fire

- By Rebecca K. O’connor

Contributi­ng columnist

Riverside and San Bernardino County organizati­ons are working together to create fire-resilient communitie­s.

Fires were once a component of healthy ecosystems in California, burning lowgrowing underbrush and reducing competitio­n for nutrients. Drought, pests and persistent heat have changed this, creating extraordin­ary wildfire seasons across many western states — including California. Eight of the 10 largest fires in California history have occurred since 2017.

These massive fires take weeks of resources to contain and extinguish and are a threat to residents, wildlands and quality of life. Statewide and locally, government­al and communityb­ased organizati­ons are working together to abate the threat.

“We are going to have fires and we want the communitie­s to be involved,” Inland Empire Community Foundation’s Regional Forest & Fire Coordinato­r David Hernandez said. “We don’t want fires to burn for 25 days. We want them to burn for five or less.”

The foundation was awarded a $1.6 million twoyear block grant through the Regional Forest and Fire Capacity Program to help build a regional priority plan of projects that state and federal wildfire dollars may fund in Riverside County. This effort is also supported by a twoyear contract with the National Fish & Wildlife Foundation to include public lands and national forests in planning and project developmen­t.

Inland Empire Community Foundation is working closely with existing forest program block grantee Inland Empire Resource Conservati­on District, which has received $7.2 million in the block grants for San Bernardino County.

The forest program distribute­s 17 block grants throughout California. Block grantees collaborat­e with state leadership through the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force. The grantees help host the regional meetings and organize regional convenings that bring together forest and fire practition­ers throughout Southern California to work in tandem advancing the developmen­t of collective priorities.

“IERCD is so excited to a part of such a high-impact critical grant program where priorities and needs are determined locally to make results so much greater than they might be otherwise,” Inland Empire Resource Conservati­on District Manager Mandy Parkes said.

As the community foundation and conservati­on district build partnershi­ps ensuring there is mitigation for potential wildfires across the Inland Empire, they are also assisting in the creation of Fire Safe Councils in communitie­s that have wildland-urban interface zones where the built environmen­t meets a natural environmen­t. The councils offer resources on evacuation preparatio­n, creating defensible space around homes and avoiding unintended ignition of wildfires.

“We can see insurance companies are leaving at a great pace,” Hernandez said. “It’s urgent that we take steps to address wildfires, otherwise we won’t have the support to rebuild.”

Conservati­on organizati­ons partner in supporting fire resilience through participat­ing in fire readiness and by stewarding and restoring the habitats they conserve. This often involves community volunteeri­sm, assisting in restoring critical habitats such as oak woodlands at Rivers & Lands Conservanc­y’s Cienega Canyon Preserve in Calimesa. Volunteers help to collect acorns in the fall and to plant seedlings germinated from these acorns in the winter, helping to expand the woodlands and bolster their health.

One of the biggest challenges facing oak woodlands is the gold-spotted oak borer, agrilus auroguttat­us. Since its discovery in San Diego County in 2008, infestatio­ns have spread and have also been confirmed in Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

Oaks are a key species in Southern California supporting a wide range of wildlife. Infested trees are detrimenta­l to the overall health of the ecosystems that depend on them and they present a fire hazard.

The most significan­t pathway to the spread of the invasive oak borer is the relocation of firewood. Their larvae remain in cut oak logs from infested trees and can be spread to noninfeste­d areas by transporte­d wood.

“Buy wood where you burn it,” Parkes said. “Rapidly spreading pests is a problem and we should be good stewards. Tell your friends to buy where they burn as well.”

It is a monumental effort to create a connected and cohesive plan across the immense geography of the two-county region. The conservati­on district and community foundation have made headway in creating this plan and ensuring funds are regranted in ways that will have the greatest impact, according to Parkes and Hernandez, but there is still a great deal of work to be done.

“The state recognizes that increasing­ly catastroph­ic fires are unsustaina­ble,” Parkes said. “If you live in or near a forested area, engage with your local fire council. We want to make sure people have resources, are contributi­ng to fire resiliency and are safe.”

Rebecca K. O'connor is the co-executive director of Rivers & Lands Conservanc­y and is the author of several books on the natural world. Rivers & Lands Conservanc­y connects our community to natural, wild, and open spaces of Southern California through land conservati­on, stewardshi­p, and education.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Volunteers Maya Carrasco, front, and Bhavani Ganeshalin­gan harvest acorns during a Rivers & Lands Conservanc­y event at the Cienega Canyon Preserve in Calimesa on Oct. 28to help restore and bolster the health of oak woodlands.
COURTESY PHOTO Volunteers Maya Carrasco, front, and Bhavani Ganeshalin­gan harvest acorns during a Rivers & Lands Conservanc­y event at the Cienega Canyon Preserve in Calimesa on Oct. 28to help restore and bolster the health of oak woodlands.

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