San Francisco Chronicle

$80 million set aside to bolster fire crews

- By Michael Williams Michael Williams is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: michael.williams@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @michaeldam­ianw

“We aren’t just waiting for the next crisis to hit.” Gov. Gavin Newsom on firefighti­ng funding

Anticipati­ng another devastatin­g year for wildfires in California, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Tuesday he was setting aside more than $80 million in emergency funding for firefighti­ng in preparatio­n for this year’s fire season.

The $80.74 million includes funding to hire a surge of nearly 1,400 Cal Fire firefighte­rs, with most of the funding going toward crews building fuel breaks and defensible spaces in vulnerable communitie­s before the peak of the fire season later this year, Newsom’s office said.

The bulk of the funding will provide for 1,256 seasonal firefighte­rs through June 30, Newsom’s office said, primarily crew and engine staffing, and the hiring and training of fuel management crews. The firefighte­rs will augment eight existing crews and create 12 new Cal Fire crews and six seasonal and six permanent Conservati­on Corps crews, officials said.

The state will also hire 24 seasonal firefighte­rs who will join California National Guard hand crews. An additional 119 firefighte­rs will staff Cal Fire’s helicopter crews, with hopes they will be ready to deploy by May.

Last year’s fire season was the largest in California’s history, burning more than 4.2 million acres, Cal Fire said — roughly 4% of the state. Nearly 10,000 fires were recorded, damaging or destroying more than 10,000 structures and killing 33 people.

Experts have raised concerns that wildfires may soon be a yearround reality for California because of the state’s warming and drier climate.

“In California, climate change is making the hots hotter and the dries drier, leaving us with world recordbrea­king temperatur­es and devastatin­g wildfires threatenin­g our communitie­s,” Newsom said in a statement. “We aren’t just waiting for the next crisis to hit — this funding will support our heroic firefighte­rs to save lives as they work to prevent and tackle destructiv­e wildfires.”

 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Oakland firefighte­rs monitor tangled live power lines after high winds knocked down a tree in January.
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Oakland firefighte­rs monitor tangled live power lines after high winds knocked down a tree in January.

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