Houston Chronicle Sunday

California fire pushes family to Vermont

- By Michael Casey

PROCTOR, Vt. — Weeks after surviving one of the deadliest and most destructiv­e wildfires in California history, the Holden family just wanted a new home.

The family of seven couldn’t find anything nearby to replace their house reduced to ashes in the 2018 Paradise fire. It proved too daunting to rebuild in a town that looked more like a deserted war zone than the tight-knit community they loved.

So they started looking farther afield for a place that, unlike California, did not seem under constant threat from wildfires, droughts and earthquake­s.

“When you are left with nothing, you start thinking ‘I don’t want to go through anything like this again,’ ” Ellie Holden said.

“I don’t want a tornado. I don’t want a hurricane. I don’t want a flood. I don’t want a fire,” she said. “As you are looking at a map of the United States, you can basically put an X through the whole western part of the country. Even Idaho, Montana, everywhere they were having droughts.”

After two years renting a house in upstate New York, the family found its way to Proctor, Vt., a town of fewer than 2,000 near the Green Mountain National Forest that was once known as the marble capital of the world. The couple, both 40, loved the small-town feel and open space that reminded them of Paradise.

Ellie’s husband, James, found an engineerin­g job. The family bought 192-year-old Valley Acres Farm with 237 acres of forest and meadows.

“I felt excited to go to a new place and be out of the fire place,” said 10-year-old Soraya Holden, one of five children, as she walked alongside the family’s herd of goats behind an old dairy barn. She ticked off the area’s perks — rock climbing, gymnastics and a climate that’s “not burning hot.”

Families are increasing­ly factoring climate into a move as temperatur­es and climate-induced disasters rise. Several reports earlier this year highlighte­d the trend. One found that 2021 was the deadliest year in the contiguous U.S. since 2011, with 688 people dying in 20 climate and weather disasters with a combined cost of at least $145 billion.

Scientists warn it’s hard to blame climate change for any single event. But with disasters piling up, some residents in hard-hit areas are concluding that staying in the line of fire is no longer an option.

“I think that the interest in climate havens is fundamenta­lly about hope — wanting to have a safe place to escape the worst impacts of climate change,” said Nicholas Rajkovich, an associate professor in the School of Architectu­re and Planning at the University at Buffalo. “But regions, counties and cities need to work to plan for the population change, combined with the impacts of climate change, that they will see.”

While little data exists documentin­g this phenomenon, there have been reports of U.S. families heading to cooler destinatio­ns not touched dramatical­ly by climate change. Communitie­s close to Canada — such as Cincinnati, Duluth, Minn., and Buffalo, N.Y. — are popular landing spots. Another Paradise family also chose Vermont.

The Holdens lost everything in the Paradise fire, joining thousands who never returned. The 2018 blaze in the Sierra Nevada foothills destroyed 19,000 structures and killed 85 people. Only several thousand of the 27,000 residents chose to remain and rebuild.

After the family barely escaped the flames in cars, they lived in their trailer on a friend’s

property, then in their church parking lot. When they returned to their home five months later, all that remained was a “pile of ash and the chimney,” James Holden said.

The few things the Holdens recovered are now boxed in the dairy barn — a burnt trombone, plant hanger, piano brackets, a jewelry box, a ladle, wedding silverware.

“As we are going through the ash and we are finding these things, it makes it more beautiful because you’ve just lost everything that was your old life,” Ellie Holden said. “It’s this piece of evidence that we had this life. We had a house. We had these things. We were happy.”

James Holden’s research indicated Vermont wasn’t at great risk of tornadoes, wildfires or hurricanes and seemed more hospitable from a climate perspectiv­e. It was, according to a climate assessment last year from University of Vermont scientists, getting hotter and wetter. But it was nothing like California.

Before buying the farm, the family watched YouTube videos of Tropical Storm Irene’s devastatio­n a decade ago. They talked to insurance agents and took solace that their home had not been flooded and that Proctor and nearby Rutland weren’t wiped out. The water only reached the two-lane road running alongside their property, not the house.

“Sure, anything can happen anywhere you live. Your house can burn down from an electric fire. Anything can happen,” Ellie Holden said. “But we got to the point where we wanted to mitigate risk that we could.”

Their new home hasn’t come without challenges. The dairy farm hasn’t operated since the 1990s and needs lots of work. The skyrocketi­ng cost of constructi­on materials has slowed renovation­s. Uninsulate­d parts of the house can fall into the single digits in winter.

But they feel blessed they found a new life.

“The hardest thing about the last three years has been our loss of that feeling of home, the loss of our community,” Ellie Holden said. “We can finally say since moving to Proctor that we’ve found our home and have been welcomed into our new community.”

 ?? Photos by Charles Krupa/Associated Press ?? Soraya Holden, 10, left, chases a chicken while walking with her family at their home Thursday in Proctor, Vt. They moved there after fleeing one of the most destructiv­e fires in California.
Photos by Charles Krupa/Associated Press Soraya Holden, 10, left, chases a chicken while walking with her family at their home Thursday in Proctor, Vt. They moved there after fleeing one of the most destructiv­e fires in California.
 ?? ?? Ellie Holden, 40, holds burned wedding silverware, which survived the fire at her family's California home, while looking at “fire treasures” now boxed up in their Vermont dairy barn.
Ellie Holden, 40, holds burned wedding silverware, which survived the fire at her family's California home, while looking at “fire treasures” now boxed up in their Vermont dairy barn.

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