The Mercury News Weekend

Working together to live safely with fire in California

- By Ana Maria Ruiz

Fire is a fact of life in California, and we all have a responsibi­lity to expand our individual and collective resiliency to it. The occurrence and severity of fire is dependent on three essential elements: oxygen, fuel and a heat source responsibl­e for ignition. Together, we can work to manage two of these elements, fuel and ignition.

Fuel for wildland fires is mainly provided by vegetation. In fact, California’s native plant communitie­s have adapted to periodic fire. However, dense regrowth after heavy historic logging coupled with more than a century of fire suppressio­n has resulted in a buildup of vegetation.

Midpeninsu­la Regional Open Space District has made significan­t investment­s of public funds to expand our vegetation management this year in an environmen­tally sensitive manner. Working with local fire agencies to identify priority areas, we will continue expanding our work into new areas of the wildland-urban interface. Examples include new fuel reduction projects in our Windy Hill, Pulgas Ridge and Bear Creek Redwoods preserves, among others. We also are planning to reintroduc­e prescribed fire under the direction of Cal Fire to reduce vegetation and restore natural habitats, starting in 2022.

In the Bay Area, we are experienci­ng increasing episodes of extreme heat. Our changing climate is contributi­ng to and exacerbati­ng these extreme weather patterns. At Midpen, we are working towards aggressive, voluntary reductions in our greenhouse gas emissions. The natural lands we manage are removing carbon from the atmosphere and storing it in forests, grasslands and soils.

According to Cal Fire, humans cause 95% of California wildland fires. Midpen rangers work to help visitors safely enjoy the preserves and enforce regulation­s prohibitin­g high fire-risk activities, including smoking, campfires and off-road vehicles. Should a fire affect Midpen open space lands, we are prepared. We equip ranger trucks with water pumpers during fire season, and our rangers are trained as wildland fire first responders to assist local fire department­s responsibl­e for fire suppressio­n.

Join us in making our community more resistant and resilient to wildland fire. Reduce your carbon footprint to help address climate change. Prevent fires by avoiding activities such as mowing, barbecuing, smoking and parking on grass, particular­ly on red flag warning days. If you live in the wildlandur­ban interface, protect your home, create an evacuation plan as a precaution and maintain defensible space around structures.

Together, we can do the work necessary to live safely with fire in California. Ana María Ruiz is the general manager of the Midpeninsu­la Regional Open Space District, a public agency created by local voters to acquire and preserve a regional greenbelt of open space land of regional significan­ce in perpetuity, protect and restore the natural environmen­t and provide opportunit­ies for ecological­ly sensitive public enjoyment and education.

 ?? BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? A hiker walks along the trail at Windy Hill Open Space Preserve, part of the Bay Ridge Trail system, in Portola Valley.
BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO A hiker walks along the trail at Windy Hill Open Space Preserve, part of the Bay Ridge Trail system, in Portola Valley.

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