The Mercury News

Communitie­s search for ways to live with growing fire threat

- By Anton L. Delgado and Dustin Patar

SHINGLETOW­N >> Unless it’s Sunday, Kelly Loew is steering her rusty red Jeep down the same mail route in Shingletow­n, as she has six days a week for the last seven years. But she delivers less mail these days as California’s persistent wildfires drive residents away.

Last year, California experience­d its deadliest and most destructiv­e wildfire season. Shingletow­n, nicknamed Little Paradise, is one of the state’s most wildfire vulnerable communitie­s.

Despite the National Interagenc­y Fire Center recording federal fire suppressio­n costs quadruplin­g since 1989, the damage caused by wildfires has increased fivefold.

“The fear is palpable,” Loew said. “When I drive home through my neighborho­od, I see tinderboxe­s everywhere.”

According to data from the National Catastroph­e Service, wildfires over the past decade have resulted in more than $52 billion in insured losses across the country. Flames have burned nearly 49,000 structures across the U.S. since 2014, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center. That’s more structures lost than in the previous 14 years combined.

“We shouldn’t be surprised that we’re seeing not only our cities growing, but lots of people taking over what had been rural landscapes and making them an urban environmen­t,” said Stephen Pyne, a wildfire historian. “People like to live in lots of areas that are full of natural hazards and it’s very hard in the American system to tell people they can’t do what they want on their property.”

This summer, the Woodbury fire northwest of Superior, Arizona, burned close to 124,000 acres and prompted a mandatory evacuation of Roosevelt and nearby communitie­s. It’s the fifth largest wildfire in state history.

“My mind was on overload. I have to pack this, I have to pack that . ... Plus you have to pack your personal stuff,” said Pat Spencer, a business owner in Roosevelt, Arizona.

“Everybody was like, ‘Why are you packing it up?’ I said, ‘Just to be safe, rather than sorry.’”

Among her most important possession­s: three figurines of angels embracing firefighte­rs. Spencer has six firefighte­rs in her family. Three of them — her son, husband and nephew — spent more than a week battling the Woodbury fire, which broke out June 8.

Last year, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center, Arizona had 838 wildfires more than the U.S. state average, placing it among the top 10 in the nation. The data show that in the first six months of 2019, wildfires in Arizona have burned more land than was burned in all of 2018. Seven other states, including Alaska and Rhode Island, have shown the same trend.

Over the past three decades, the number of wildfires declared major disasters by the Federal Emergency Management Agency has been steadily growing, with 19 since 2009. Nearly 68% occurred in California, Colorado and Oklahoma; the others were in Texas, Washington, Tennessee and Montana.

The cost of wildfire recovery often falls to individual states. To get federal dollars flowing, the governor has to request a disaster declaratio­n and FEMA must recommend it to the president, who can deny or approve it.

But while the number of wildfire disaster declaratio­ns has grown in the past two decades, only 16.2% of wildfires larger than 100,000 acres have been declared major disasters, which is about 0.002% of all wildfires in the past 20 years.

Tinderboxe­s everywhere

“Being human means there’s risk of some sort in your life,” Loew said. “If you’re looking for a quiet mountain town with a good community, a good school and great people, this is the place to be . ... I don’t know why people wouldn’t want to live here.”

According to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s 2010 Wildland Urban Interface report, Shingletow­n is an intermixed community, meaning housing and wildland vegetation intermingl­e, which increases wildfire risk.

The report shows over 39 million people across the country live in forested communitie­s like Shingletow­n. More than half live in 10 states: Texas, North Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvan­ia, New York, California, Florida, Virginia, South Carolina and Alabama.

In California, more than 1.74 million residents live in such communitie­s. Since the report came out in 2010, more structures have been burned in the Golden State than anywhere else in the United States.

The more than 41,000 burned structures in California is nearly 13 times more than the next state, Texas, which had 3,222 structures burned in the same time span.

“Fueled by drought, an unpreceden­ted buildup of dry vegetation and extreme winds, the size and intensity of these wildfires caused the loss of more than 100 lives, destroyed thousands of homes and exposed millions of urban and rural California­ns to unhealthy air,” according to a February report by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire.

More than 25 million acres of California wildlands are classified as under very high or extreme fire threat. The report blames “climate change, an epidemic of dead and dying trees, and the proliferat­ion of new homes in the wildland urban interface.”

Research by the University of Idaho in 2016 found that wildfires in the West have been made worse by higher temperatur­es associated with climate change. Warmer air has made forests drier, making vegetation more flammable and better wildfire fuel.

Shingletow­n, named after its historic production of wooden shingles, is considered vulnerable because of its average age of 61, its median household income of $42,000 — more than $18,000 less than the national median, and its location in the foothills of the Cascade Range.

To prevent larger wildfires, Cal Fire plans to grind down vegetation. Its top priority project is to create defensible space, along Shingletow­n’s main road, Highway 44.

In a low-income community like Shingletow­n, not everyone can afford to create defensible space. Some simply burn the flammable brush, known as slash, in their yards.

“Every slash pile being burned has the potential of getting away,” said Tom Twist, deputy chief of the Shingletow­n Fire Safe Council, which offers a program that gives residents access to a site to dump flammable vegetation. “We want to reduce the chances of what we call doorstep burn piles.”

California Assemblyma­n Jim Wood said he’s been working to find funding for wildfire prevention since wildfires in 2017 killed 44 people in Northern California, which until last year, were the most destructiv­e in state history.

In November 2018, the Camp Fire in Butte County killed 86 people and destroyed close to 12,000 structures. That made it the deadliest wildfire since the 1918 Cloquet Fire, which killed more than 450 people in Minnesota.

Wood, a dentist by trade, volunteere­d with local authoritie­s to use dental records to identify victims in Paradise. Less than a month later, he proposed Assembly Bill 38, which would establish a $1 billion fund meant to financiall­y aid low-income residents to fireproof their homes. The bill passed but was stripped of funding.

“The legislativ­e process is not perfect,” Wood said. “But the commitment I have to trying to find a funding source ... to help people protect their homes isn’t going away.”

California’s building code requires homes in fire-prone regions built after 2008 to have fire resistant roofs and siding, and other safeguards. This year, a similar amendment was passed in Oregon, which had the sixth most wildfires in 2018. Both codes require homeowners to pay for it.

In 2010, 40 million people in the country lived in forested communitie­s, approximat­ely 1-in-10 Americans. But despite the risk of wildfires, building projects continue to be approved in areas still recovering from previous blazes.

Fight or flight

Twist, of the Shingletow­n Fire Safe Council, said he sees this as his second war. He served two tours in Vietnam — first in the infantry, then in the air cavalry.

“There is a lot of correlatio­n between warfare between humans and warfare between humans and the environmen­t,” he said. “When the fire comes ... it’s chaotic for the first several hours until people settle in. It’s the same in a firefight.”

To control the chaos, Twist has been pushing to install SR-7 wildfire early-detection systems, which use infrared and optical cameras to detect growing wildfires.

“The Camp fire is a prime example of what happens when you’re dealing with inadequate informatio­n in a rapidly developing wildfire,” he said. “If the SR-7 system had been deployed ... it would have detected the fire and it would have given the people of Paradise about an hour and a half more time to evacuate.”

In June, residents of Roosevelt had a day’s warning before they had to flee the Woodbury fire.

“We want people to be ready to go. If it’s moving towards them, when we say go, we want them to grab their bags and get out of there,” Dick Fleishman, a National Forest Service fire informatio­n officer, said the day before the June 20 evacuation.

Spencer spent five days working on her brother’s yard waiting for the threat to be extinguish­ed and the evacuation lifted. She was among the first to re-enter Roosevelt Estates.

“In the name of the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit, Amen. Thank you, Lord, for protecting us, for protecting our homes. Thank you, Lord, for protecting our firefighte­rs; without them our homes would not be safe,” Spencer said. “There are just no words, but thank God we are home. There’s no place like home. Amen.”

As she prayed, Spencer’s eldest son and nephew were still on the fire line.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States