San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

DATA: WEALTHIER, WHITER AREAS MORE LIKELY TO GET HELP AFTER FIRES

Such communitie­s get fuel projects 30-40% more often

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R FLAVELLE

Wealthier and Whiter neighborho­ods stricken by wildfires are more likely to get help to reduce the risk of future fires, new data suggest, the latest evidence that racial and economic inequality leave some Americans more exposed to the worsening effects of climate change.

The findings, issued this month by Resources for the Future, a Washington-based research group, show that after a wildfire, the federal government is more likely to take steps to reduce the severity of future fires in the same area, but only when the communitie­s nearby are Whiter or have higher incomes than average.

“Certain communitie­s are better able to rally government support,” said Matthew Wibbenmeye­r, an economist and researcher at Resources for the Future who wrote the paper with Sarah Anderson and Andrew Plantinga, professors at the University of California Santa Barbara. “It can change the amount of risk communitie­s face.”

The research follows one of the most destructiv­e wildfire seasons in U.S. history. Over time, the combinatio­n of rising temperatur­es and longer dry periods has made fires more frequent and intense. In California alone, fires consumed more than 4 million acres, more than double the previous annual record, destroying more than 10,000 structures.

Wildfires have disproport­ionately severe effects on poorer households and people of color, who are often more physically exposed, less likely to have insurance and may struggle to rebuild, according to previous research. The latest findings suggest that the government’s decisions after a fire also make a difference, by prioritizi­ng some places over others.

One of the most important ways the federal government can cut wildfire risk is through so-called “fuel treatment” projects: reducing the amount of flammable vegetation in fire-prone areas, using either heavy machinery or by burning it off with a carefully controlled fire, set intentiona­lly and for that purpose. But those projects are expensive, and Congress provides the government with funds to treat just a small fraction of the land at risk from fire each year.

Wibbenmeye­r and his colleagues wanted to find out whether suffering a wildfire would increase a community’s odds of getting a fuel project. They looked at more than 41,000 census blocks that had been within 1.2 miles of a wildfire between 2000 and 2011 and found that most neighborho­ods were no more likely to get a fuel project than before.

But in areas that were wealthier, or had a smaller proportion of people of color, the story turned out to be different. Places where all or almost all the residents were White saw their chances of getting a fuel treatment go up by 30 percent. And those odds went up by 40 percent in places where few or no households were below the poverty line.

“This paper shows that similar events can yield very different policy outcomes for different types of communitie­s,” the researcher­s wrote.

The data doesn’t answer the question of why federal agencies seem to prioritize fuel projects that benefit those communitie­s, Wibbenmeye­r said. The difference could reflect the preference­s of staff within those agencies, or the fact that wealthier areas may be better at applying political pressure, pushing those agencies to move them to the top of the list.

More than 90 percent of the federal fuel-treatment projects carried out during the period in question were done by three agencies, according to the paper: The Bureau of Land Management, the Forest Service and the National Park Service. Officials from all three agencies said wealth or race had no influence over their decisions about which projects to pursue.

“In collaborat­ion with local stakeholde­rs, sciencebas­ed risk assessment­s are conducted by wildland firefighte­r crews to strategica­lly determine how to best protect people, communitie­s and infrastruc­ture,” Jessica Gardetto, a spokeswoma­n for the BLM, which administer­s one-tenth of all land in the United States, said by email.

Christophe­r Peters, president of the Seventh Generation Fund for Indigenous Peoples, which aims to help Native American communitie­s, said Native Americans are disproport­ionately exposed to wildfires because of where they live but have a harder time getting federal agencies to reduce fire risk on nearby land.

“When it comes to putting the dollars where their mouth is, they provide services to non-native communitie­s,” Peters said.

Kimiko Barrett, a researcher and policy analyst at Headwaters Economics, a wildfire policy consulting nonprofit in Montana, said the government’s struggle to address fire risk more equitably stemmed in part from an outdated understand­ing about who is in danger.

For decades, Barrett said, most of the people moving into fire-prone areas were White and well-off. But rising home costs in cities and suburbs are increasing­ly pushing lower-income and minority families into those areas, she said, and all levels of government need to change their fire policies to reflect that growing economic and racial diversity.

That could mean offering more help clearing vegetation, getting better at evacuating people who don’t speak English from danger zones or subsidizin­g improvemen­ts to make homes less fireprone, Barrett said. But first, policymake­rs have to recognize that the current system isn’t always fair and the problem is worsening as climate change accelerate­s.

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