The Ukiah Daily Journal

Rising seas, wildfires endanger state parks

- By Julie Cart

Of all the existentia­l threats California parks face — dwindling budgets, more visitors and costly, long-deferred maintenanc­e — now comes a climate-driven conundrum: When is a park no longer a park? When its namesake trees disappear in a barrage of lightning strikes? When its very land is washed away by ever-rising seas?

The California Department of Parks and Recreation is coming to terms with this dilemma after a climate-reckoning moment last August, when more than 97% of Big Basin Redwoods, Califor

nia’s oldest state park, was charred by a lightnings­parked wildfire.

The shock of it was almost greater than the devastatio­n: Coastal redwoods, the so-called asbestos forests of iconic, giant trees, hadn’t been hit by such ferocious blaze in living memory. The fire incinerate­d buildings and roads along with many trees; it was the most unexpected, indiscrimi­nate and comprehens­ive destructio­n of a California state park, ever. Establishe­d 119 years ago, Big Basin remains closed.

Although all state agencies face the threat of climate change, state parks — with the depth and breadth of their 2,300 square miles of land — are singularly jeopardize­d. Caretaker of the nation’s largest state park system, the department is responsibl­e for all of its historic structures, roads, bridges, land, beaches, forests, water, plants and animals.

“Every bit of California is going to be impacted by climate change. It’s going to affect every person in the state and every acre of land in the state,” said Jay Chamberlin, chief of the state parks’ natural resources division. “State parks are not only vulnerable, but some are uniquely vulnerable.”

Managing California’s nearly 300 parks will now require a top-to-bottom rethink: How to make public land more resilient to wildfires, rising seas, drought and extreme weather. The price tag for arming state beaches, thinning forests, moving restrooms and visitors’ centers, and other climate-resilience projects has not been calculated. But experts say if the money isn’t spent now to protect parks from rising seas and intensifie­d fires, the damage and costs will multiply.

“There’s needs to be a climate resilience plan for every park unit,” said Rachel Norton, executive director of the nonprofit California State Parks Foundation. “This is what’s coming: Drought, fire, sea level rise, loss of habitat for species. There’s a lot more work to be done to understand the scope of the potential threat.”

In particular, making California’s state parks resilient to sea level rise and flooding is critical; the agency manages about a quarter of the state’s coastline. Although the state’s climate change response is ongoing and frequently updated, a comprehens­ive sea-level rise plan for parks is being finalized, officials said.

Chamberlin said the agency is transition­ing “to a stance where we consider climate in everything we do.”

“I’m talking about planning our capital investment, the vehicles we purchase or how we plan projects. When it comes to coastal issues, do not build in harm’s way. If a building needs roof repair, harden it if it’s in a wildfire zone. We are believers in building resilience into everything we do.”

The legislatur­e is watching to see what the parks department comes up with.

“I tend to think, is there an engineerin­g solution or a technology solution to this?” said Luz Rivas, a Democrat from Arleta who chairs the Assembly Natural Resources Committee.

Rivas, who has a degree in electrical engineerin­g from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and an advanced degree from Harvard, wonders if California can apply its ample brainpower to come up with solutions.

“We are very fortunate to have many research institutio­ns and national labs working on this. California is a leader in climate change policy but also technology. I think we should meld the two.”

Forest fires of the future Climate change will make forests more susceptibl­e to extreme wildfires. By 2100, if greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, one study found that the frequency of extreme wildfires burning over approximat­ely 25,000 acres would increase by nearly 50 percent,

and that average area burned statewide would increase by 77 percent by the end of the century.

— California’s Fourth Climate Change Assessment (2018) Even those deeply familiar with every woody acre of Big Basin Redwoods — home to ancient trees of such stature that many are named and curated — the aftermath was unsettling.

“Going back into the park for the first time, it was very hard to believe what I was seeing,” said Chris Spohrer, state parks superinten­dent for the Santa Cruz region. “To see what a fire of that intensity could do was disorienti­ng. The landmarks were gone, the colors were monochroma­tic. It took several visits for it to sink in, to get your bearings. It was shocking.”

Even though the bulk of the contents of Big Basin was damaged or destroyed, the idea of the park, a celebratio­n of the tallest living things on the planet, remains intact, officials say. While redwoods were burned, their bark is thick and fire-resistant, so park managers expect many of the big trees to survive, although other species, such as Douglas Firs, are not as hardy.

But things will be different. Managing a park to be resilient to fire is going to require change in a fundamenta­l way in the decades to come: Visitors will have to alter their definition of a healthy park to include the sight of fewer trees and more prescribed burning. Managers may have to reduce the forest in order to save the park, and consider building future visitor centers and other facilities out of more fire-resistant materials like metal or concrete rather than charming but flammable wood.

Beginning in 1900, the Sempervire­ns Fund, a nonprofit conservati­on group, purchased about 17,000 acres of redwood forests and transferre­d them to the state, essentiall­y creating Big Basin Redwoods. The organizati­on also manages its own adjacent forests for climate resiliency by thinning and conducting controlled burns to reduce abnormal density of old-growth stands.

That work paid dividends

during the blaze, resulting in low-intensity fire that cleared out overgrown vegetation but spared the giant trees on the group’s land, providing an object lesson for the adjacent park.

“There’s no one quick fix to any of this,” said Laura Mclendon, the Sempervire­ns Fund’s director of land conservati­on.

To survive climate change, she said, California’s forested parklands must be aggressive­ly managed for fire using an array of approaches. “There needs to be a suite of activities — fuels reduction, reintroduc­ing fire to the landscape where it has historical­ly occurred, rethinking where we develop and the materials we use.”

The complexiti­es of extreme weather played a role in the Big Basin fire. Coastal redwoods are historical­ly shrouded in cool, moist fog, providing a wet blanket that spared the region the catastroph­ic fires that plague the rest of the state. That fog has been significan­tly reduced and the region’s nighttime temperatur­es have risen.

Twenty-two state parks were hit by fire last year, according to the State Parks Foundation. Climate scientists say California can expect more frequent fires and more damaging megafires.

In Southern California, fires driven by late-summer winds regularly scorch state parks. More than half of parkland in the Santa Monica Mountains was damaged in the 2018 Woolsey Fire, with the popular beach retreats of Leo Carrillo and Malibu Creek

State Parks bearing the brunt of the blaze. Historical sites were lost as well as employee residences and campground­s. Will Rogers State Historic Park, a popular hiking retreat, has been hit by fire, and up the coast, Point Mugu State Park was nearly destroyed in 2013 by the Spring Fire, which burned more than 80 percent of the park and left it vulnerable to flooding.

Climate change’s impacts require adapting to a new and sometimes unfriendly climate, and building resilience — the buzzword of the moment — into the state parks’ nearly 1.5 million acres.

Sarah Newkirk, director of disaster resilience for The California Nature Conservanc­y, said it “used to be about bouncing back.” But now, “instead of bouncing back to the original configurat­ion, we need to learn to bounce back better.”

Rising seas, rising threats

A new model estimates that, under mid to high sea-level rise scenarios, 31 to 67 percent of Southern California beaches may completely erode by 2100 without large-scale human interventi­ons. Statewide damages could reach nearly $17.9 billion from inundation of residentia­l and commercial buildings under (20 inches) of sea-level rise, which is close to the 95th percentile of potential sea-level rise by the middle of this century. A 100-year coastal flood, on top of this level of sea-level rise, would almost double the costs.

— California’s Fourth Climate Change Assessment (2018) Darren Smith doesn’t need to read a report about climate change to understand the threats to state parks. He’s living it every day.

Smith, who is the natural resources manager for the park department’s San Diego Coast District, is fighting water — from all sides.

“We are being squeezed,” he said, gesturing to the ocean on a recent visit to South Carlsbad State Beach. The sea’s powerful wave action throws rocks and boulders up on the beach, cobbling it with smooth stones that crowd out sand.

Turning, Smith points to the cliffs behind him and

the city of Carlsbad on the other side of a highway. El Nino-powered storms create runoff that gushes over bluffs or percolates into porous sandstone, carving fissures that pockmark and destabiliz­e the cliff face. “We don’t have anywhere to go.”

As for a park campsite on a promontory affording a magnificen­t view of rugged coastline, “it’s a goner,” he said.

The Pacific Ocean is inexorably rising on the beaches he manages, slamming into bluffs and underminin­g parking lots, campsites and restroom facilities. On the ever-shrinking state beaches, Smith and his crews fight to preserve all-important “towel space” as well as public access. Staircases that lead down to the beach are in rusty decay and battered by waves.

The parks department is on a penny-pinching budget — $858 million for 2021-22, down 34% from the previous year because of onetime bond appropriat­ions. Coronaviru­s closures cost the agency lost revenue from entrance fees and concession­s.

The state is facing even worse sticker shock when considerin­g the systemwide costs to respond to climate change. Smith said the agency can spend $3 million just replacing one beachfront staircase.

Experts say the state can no longer throw good money after bad and must plan for managed retreat — a wholesale push away from the sea. In Southern California, state park facilities are moved back from the shore in order to preserve them. Smith said a handful of beach-facing parking lots in his district have already been lost or moved.

In one case, not only does the public lose convenient access to a beach, but the state lost the parking lot’s annual $400,000 in revenue and spots for more than a million cars.

In some places, where the state beach is a narrow strip of land hemmed in by a road or highway, agency officials have to get creative, buying or swapping property from neighborin­g cities in order to move out of harm’s way.

Elsewhere, beach parks are being reconfigur­ed by massive sand-moving projects. On a recent day, a parking lot served as a staging area for heavy equipment and excavators preparing to sculpt sand reclaimed from a nearby lagoon.

In Encinitas, an experiment in restoring a “living shoreline” is underway, an example of so-called soft armoring. Rather than piling up massive mountains of rock or pouring concrete to keep the sea at bay, the park built a dunes system anchored by native plants. The undulating sand dunes now provide an invaluable function, absorbing and slowing encroachin­g waves and providing habitat for an array of animals and plants.

The dunes are not only stabilizin­g the sand and preserving the beach, but on the landward side they prevent sand drifts from accumulati­ng on the adjacent road. “If it wasn’t for this project, (it’s) guaranteed we would have lost some of the highway,” Smith said.

Smith said the parks agency is keenly aware of “what climate change is doing and will do in the future.” But he said, “we can’t keep up.”

Parks are threatened by other aspects of climate change, too: Extremes of heat and cold stress facilities and operations. Drought threatens animals’ habitat and makes trees more susceptibl­e to disease and insect infestatio­n.

Chamberlin, the parks’ resources chief, said future investment­s will be assessing whether a proposed facility is going to eventually be underwater or vulnerable to fire.

Whether its fire or water, climate change will continue to eat away at California’s parks — and the agency’s budget.

“The state parks system represents the most profound investment on the part of all California­ns and reflects our collective passion to protect the natural environmen­t,” said The Nature Conservanc­y’s Newkirk. “The state parks system has a real role in providing a good example of resiliency.”

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“This is what’s coming: Drought, fire, sea level rise, loss of habitat for species. There’s a lot more work tobedoneto understand the scope of the potential threat” — Rachel Norton, executive director of the nonprofit California State Parks Foundation

 ?? PHOTO BY SHAE HAMMOND FOR CALMATTERS ?? Despite decades-long attempts to prevent erosion, bluffs at South Carlsbad State Beach continue to fail, battered by rising seas.
PHOTO BY SHAE HAMMOND FOR CALMATTERS Despite decades-long attempts to prevent erosion, bluffs at South Carlsbad State Beach continue to fail, battered by rising seas.

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