Marin Independent Journal

Laws approved to address wildfires

- By Gillian Brassil

Congress has pushed through measures in the final days of this legislativ­e session that could help California with wildfire prevention and mitigation.

One of those laws could get California more planes to fight fires, a change Gov. Gavin Newsom and California senators discussed with White House officials in July. Another would ensure the federal agency charged with responding to natural disasters treats wildfires with the same level of urgency as it does hurricanes.

A bill pushed by California Sen. Alex Padilla eliminates the cap on extra military planes that the Department of Defense can transfer in a year to an agency or state for wildfire suppressio­n through the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act.

Padilla, a Democrat, said eliminatin­g the cap — currently seven planes per agency — would “improve our ability to fight increasing­ly catastroph­ic wildfires in California and across the West by growing our federal aerial firefighti­ng fleets on the front lines of wildfires.”

The measure also allows states to acquire the aircraft directly, rather than through an agency, and requires an annual report on the number of planes transferre­d each year.

Padilla, Newsom and California Sen. Dianne Feinstein met with Department of Defense and Biden administra­tion officials to discuss removing the cap at no cost to the Federal Emergency Management Agency or the U.S. Forest Service.

“I want to thank Senator Padilla for his leadership and doggedness on this issue after our joint meeting with the White House and Department of Defense in July,” Newsom said in a statement about the measure's inclusion.

“This bill has the potential to be transforma­tive for California's efforts to protect communitie­s from catastroph­ic wildfire by working in partnershi­p with the federal government to expand access to firefighti­ng aircraft,” he said.

Another measure poised to become law updates the law that governs FEMA, the Stafford Act, to improve its response to wildfires. That includes damage that is unique to wildfires, like melted infrastruc­ture and burnt debris.

Mark Ghilarducc­i, Director of the California Governor's Office of Emergency Services, said the act was “a critical step forward in modernizin­g how the federal government works with states, like California, to prepare for, respond to and recover from catastroph­ic wildfires and other disasters.”

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