Santa Fe New Mexican

Disaster planning rises as priority for governors

- By Geoff Mulvihill

Governors have a wide range of priorities they want to tackle in the coming year, from tax reform to education. Yet it’s a topic that receives less attention on the campaign trail and in their speeches that could determine their success: natural disasters.

In the past two years alone, storms and natural disasters have killed scores of people, damaged or destroyed tens of thousands of homes and cost tens of billions of dollars.

Wildfires in the West and hurricanes in the South have been especially destructiv­e, and scientists say climate change is making this more common. As the severity escalates, governors are finding they have to make disaster planning a priority or risk the consequenc­es of inaction defining their terms and enraging voters.

Handling disasters and emergencie­s was a prime topic last week when the National Governors Associatio­n held a three-day seminar in Colorado that most of the nation’s 19 governors-elect attended.

“As California’s wildfires, a spate of hurricanes, and unfortunat­e acts of mass violence have demonstrat­ed, such events can occur at any time,” Scott Pattison, the nonpartisa­n associatio­n’s chief executive, said in a statement, “including a governor’s first day in office.”

For many Democratic governors especially, the main concern is how climate change appears to be worsening the effects of natural disasters.

In California, half of the 10 most destructiv­e wildfires in state history have occurred since 2017, and the costliest have been in each of the past three years, according to the state firefighti­ng agency.

The state is dealing with its most destructiv­e wildfire ever, a Northern California blaze that leveled a town of 27,000 this month, killed at least 80 people and left thousands homeless. That blaze, and another that roared through Malibu at the same time and left at least three dead, are the latest in a string of catastroph­ic wildfires that have put the state in what seems like a perpetual state of emergency.

During his campaign, incoming Gov. Gavin Newsom said wildfire planning would be a priority for his administra­tion and outlined a number of steps he wants to take. Among them is a more aggressive approach to clearing trees and brush, particular­ly the state’s millions of dead trees.

In Colorado, the two most destructiv­e wildfires in state history erupted within the last six years, killed a total of four people and destroyed more than 850 homes combined. Both are believed to be caused by humans, leading Democrat Jared Polis, Colorado’s governor-elect, to call for a public education campaign to reduce the possibilit­y of man-made wildfires.

He also said the state should invest in programs to remove flammable debris and help communitie­s and private landowners take steps to prevent the spread of wildfires.

On the other side of the country, where Florida has been hit with two deadly and destructiv­e hurricanes in roughly a year’s time, Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis, a Republican, has said he will work with local government­s to address rising sea levels, but he has been criticized by Democrats for avoiding any mention of climate change in his environmen­tal plan.

DeSantis has said he is neither a climate change “denier” nor a “believer.” That could be a problem for identifyin­g long-term solutions to keep coastal communitie­s safe, said Jen Hensley, the director of state lobbying and advocacy at the Sierra Club.

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