Los Angeles Times

‘We have to learn from this’

Camp fire offers lessons of ‘urban conflagrat­ion’ disguised as wildland blaze

- By Thomas Curwen and Joseph Serna

PARADISE, Calif. — Driving toward Paradise on the afternoon of Nov. 8, Jonathan Pangburn was less worried about the flames burning through the forest than he was about the smoke. Black and thick, it billowed over the road like a dangerous fog, cutting visibility to less than three feet in places.

A member of the incident management team with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, Pangburn knew the signs. Gray smoke meant vegetation. Black smoke meant homes, possibly entire city blocks. The Camp fire was no longer just a wildland fire.

“It was an urban conflagrat­ion,” Pangburn said. “It was structure-to-structuret­o-structure ignition that carried the fire through this community.”

Located in the Sierra foothills at an elevation that favored Ponderosa pines, Paradise might have seemed susceptibl­e to the ravages of a forest fire. But what Pangburn realized is that the Camp fire had changed its character upon entering the town — and in that revelation lay the hope for preventing tragedies such as this from happening again.

Fires that spread from house to house generate a force of their own. Embers, broadcast by the wind, find dry leaves, igniting one structure then another, and the cycle is perpetuate­d block after block. Break that cycle and the fire quits, and destructio­n can be minimized.

Paradise, though, never had that chance. Defensible space and hardened structures could not have kept the firestorm, carried on gusts clocking in the low 50s and feeding on the homes and low-lying vegetation, from reducing the town to ash.

Most telling were the trees. Most of the pines that sheltered this community still had their canopies in-

tact. The needles, yellowed from the intense heat, were not burned — evidence that the winds that morning had pushed the fire along so fast it never had a chance to rise into the trees. But as a surface fire, it lighted up the homes that lay in its path.

“I don’t know if there was anything that could have been done to save Paradise,” Pangburn said. “It was some of the most intense fire behavior that I have ever witnessed.”

More than a week later — with 79 fatalities and some 700 still missing, more than 10,000 homes destroyed and 150,000 acres consumed — Pangburn says there is opportunit­y in this destructio­n.

“The Camp fire has been the most destructiv­e wildland fire in the state of California, and we don’t want to experience this again,” he said. “We have to learn from this so that no one else will have to suffer through such an inferno.”

Drawing lessons from tragedy is never easy, especially when those lessons have been known for years.

“Our problem is a society that is unintentio­nally, but actively, ignoring opportunit­ies because of the cultural perception of wildfire,” said Jack Cohen, who is retired from the U.S. Forest Service where he worked for 40 years as a fire research scientist.

That perception, he argues, is based on myth and fear and complicate­d by an ongoing narrative that attributes conflagrat­ions like the Camp fire to such factors as climate change, overgrown forests and urban encroachme­nt into rural areas.

Each has played a role in perpetuati­ng and prolonging recent fires, but they needn’t be entirely solved to minimize losses. There are steps that can be taken to protect homes and communitie­s, he said, steps that require cooperatio­n and political will.

The demonizati­on of California wildf ires

The first step, Cohen said, is to address the misinforma­tion about wildland fires.

Over decades, Americans have become disassocia­ted from the reality of fire. Smokey Bear was almost too successful in demonizing wildfire. There is a time and a place and a set of circumstan­ces when fires are beneficial for the landscape.

But video of flames purling up canyon walls and photograph­s of firefighte­rs standing as heroic silhouette­s against a wall of orange flames perpetuate the belief that fire is both scourge and enemy. The reality is more nuanced.

“People see what they believe, and that prevents change to a readily available, effective approach to preventing these disasters,” Cohen said.

The phenomenon in Paradise that Pangburn described — the fire spreading from structure to structure, tree canopies intact — is not unique to the Camp fire.

Fire behavioris­ts have documented it throughout the West, most recently in the aftermath of the firestorms that ravaged Northern California last year.

In spite of this, the popular perception is that wildfires burn through these communitie­s like a wall of flames. In fact, small, burning embers — firebrands — blown in advance of the blaze are the primary cause of structural fires.

“When we look at the big flames but not the firebrands, we miss the principal igniter and pay attention to the show,” Cohen said.

Billions of these embers fly into neighborho­ods, landing on flammable roofs, in vegetation around the structure and in rain gutters choked with leaves and needles.

Big flame fronts, on the other hand, are less effective in igniting structures because they burn fast — often consuming their fuels in about a minute or less in one location — and move along often so quickly as to consume the structures themselves.

Yet in the face of increasing­ly severe and deadly wildfires throughout the country, Cohen maintains that it is possible to decrease the vulnerabil­ity of urban developmen­t in the face of these events.

“Uncontroll­ed extreme wildfires are inevitable,” he said, “but does that mean these disasters are inevitable? No. We have great opportunit­ies as homeowners to prevent our houses from igniting during wildfires.”

State’s f ire codes require examinatio­n

Pangburn’s assessment — that the Camp fire in Paradise was an urban conflagrat­ion, structure to structure — opens the door for fire behavioris­ts to consider the strengths and weaknesses of the state’s codes for protecting property in fireprone, rural environmen­ts.

The mandate in California, as stated in Public Resources Code Section 4291, is clear: A 100-foot perimeter of “defensible space” must be maintained in “land that is covered with flammable material.”

Though the 100-foot requiremen­t is appropriat­e, it is important to begin thinking closer to the structure itself and work out in concentric circles, Cohen said.

“We have to take care of everything from five feet out,” he said, “so that when it burns, it doesn’t produce enough radiation to ignite the structure or produce enough flames to contact the structure.”

The goal is to distinguis­h between structure fires and wildland fires and to understand that communitie­s can be separated from wildland fire. We don’t have to live in ammo bunkers, Cohen said, and we don’t have to entirely eliminate fire from within the perimeter, just ensure that fires that occur within 100 feet don’t burn long enough or intensely enough to ignite other objects.

A defensible perimeter also provides residents with more options as fire approaches.

Cohen refers to the story of the medical staff and patients from the hospital in Paradise who took refuge in a home. Climbing on the roof with hoses and clearing pine needles from the rain gutters, they were able to survive. “A house that doesn’t burn is the best place to be during a wildfire,” he said.

However, the 100-foot requiremen­t in California stops at the property line, which creates a situation in which homes can be built beside one another within that perimeter.

The social dynamic needs to change

If Paradise and the other communitie­s destroyed by the Camp fire are to be rebuilt, then the conversati­on must address the role that neighbors play collective­ly in protecting themselves and their environmen­t.

The physics of fire won’t change, Cohen said, “but the social dynamic can. It requires cooperatio­n and planning.” Paradise could not have been saved, but its lessons have the potential for helping other communitie­s when the next inevitable fire starts to burn.

In the aftermath of major urban fires — the conflagrat­ions that destroyed Chicago and San Francisco, a 1973 blaze that destroyed a Boston neighborho­od, a 1982 fire that took out four blocks in Anaheim — reforms led to stronger building codes and zoning laws, insurance requiremen­ts and advance fire protection systems.

Fire experts, like Cohen and Pangburn, hope that the devastatio­n of the Camp fire will lead not just to reform but to a greater understand­ing of what it means to live in a fire-prone, droughtrav­aged landscape.

Fire agencies cannot be entirely relied upon to keep fire away from homes or keep homes from igniting.

“The wildlands firefighte­r’s job is to contain the wildfire,” Cohen said. It’s up to the community to keep itself safe.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? RYAN SPAINHOWER embraces his wife, Kimberly, amid the remains of their home that the Camp fire destroyed in Paradise, Calif.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times RYAN SPAINHOWER embraces his wife, Kimberly, amid the remains of their home that the Camp fire destroyed in Paradise, Calif.
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? THE REMAINS of a house destroyed by the deadly Camp fire stand eerily amid the surroundin­g forestry last week in Paradise, Calif.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times THE REMAINS of a house destroyed by the deadly Camp fire stand eerily amid the surroundin­g forestry last week in Paradise, Calif.

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