Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

California exhales as quiet fire season ends

Just 362,403 acres burned; 2.5M in ’21

- By Hayley Smith

Despite months of warnings fueled by extreme heat and drought-desiccated conditions, California’s deadly fire season ended with remarkably little area burned, with just 362,403 acres scorched in 2022, compared with more than 2.5 million acres the year before.

Standing in a field of dry, brown grass in Napa earlier this month, Gov. Gavin Newsom and several state officials gathered to mark what they described as “the end of peak wildfire season” in most of California, attributin­g the year’s relatively small acreage to massive investment­s in forest health and resilience projects and an expansion of the state’s firefighti­ng fleet.

But although the worst of the season may be behind us, experts noted that the remarkably reduced fire activity is probably less a factor of strategy than good fortune.

“We got really lucky this year,” said Park Williams, an associate professor of geography at the University of Califorina, Los Angeles. “By the end of June, things were looking like the dice were loaded very strongly toward big fires because things were very dry, and there was a chance of big heat waves in the summer, and indeed we actually did have a really big heat wave this summer in September. But that coincided with some really well-timed and wellplaced rainstorms.”

Indeed, two of the year’s biggest fires — the Mckinney fire in Siskiyou County and the Fairview fire in Riverside County — were left smoldering after the arrival of rainstorms, including the unusual appearance of a tropical storm, which helped significan­tly boost containmen­t of the Fairview fire.

“Precipitat­ion was coming right at the time when it was most needed,” Williams said. “Stuff was getting so dried out by these heat waves, and then at kind of like peak dryness, suddenly the skies opened up and soaked everything down, and it happened repeatedly.”

But although acreage this year was relatively small, 2022’s fire season was also far deadlier than last year’s, with nine fatalities, all civilians, compared with three firefighte­r deaths in 2021. Some of the deadliest fires, including the Mckinney and Fairview fires, burned with significan­t speed fueled by dried vegetation, allowing little time for people to escape.

Fires this year were also destructiv­e: By the end of its 10-day run in September, the Mill fire in Siskiyou County had leveled the entire neighborho­od of Lincoln Heights in Weed. The Mckinney and Oak fires in Mariposa County each destroyed nearly 200 structures, while the Coastal fire in Orange County in May claimed at least 20 homes.

Still, some on-the-ground efforts appear to be working. The state has responded to 7,329 fires this year — about 200 more than this time last year — despite far fewer acres burning, indicating that crews were either extinguish­ing blazes more quickly.

The biggest blaze of the year, the 77,000-acre Mosquito fire in Placer and El Dorado counties, was much smaller than the biggest fire of 2021, the 963,000-acre Dixie fire.

Officials said several other factors helped contribute to the overall tamer season, including a $2.8-billion investment in wildfire resilience projects over the last two years for forest management work, prescribed burns and community outreach.

“This past year, really, the tremendous amount of combined proactive efforts that were put forth by state and local and tribal and federal agencies here in California really did result in less damaging, less destructiv­e fire impacts,” California Office of Emergency Services Director Mark Ghilarducc­i said. “While some of this obviously is a result of weather, maybe a bit of luck, that sustained investment … clearly made a difference this year.”

Joe Tyler, director of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said the agency completed more than 100,000 acres of fuels reduction each year since 2019, including about 20,000 acres in the last two months alone.

California also made significan­t investment­s in aerial support, including about a dozen new Firehawk helicopter­s that can carry more water than previous Cal Fire fleets and fly night missions, officials said. Six private fixed-wing aircrafts hired on short-term contracts also flew more than 2,700 hours on firefighti­ng missions across the state this year.

“We are mindful that we are not out of the woods, so we’re not here with any signs of ‘mission accomplish­ed’ in any way, shape or form,” Newsom said, “but we are here to highlight the work that has been done this year.”

The governor added that the state brought on an additional 1,350 firefighti­ng personnel, which allowed for peak staffing as early as June.

Williams cautioned that officials “need to be really careful about taking credit for the luck that weather brings, because next year the dice are once again loaded for a really big fire season, and (they) have not treated all of the forests in California in one year.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier
Los Angeles Times ?? Los Angeles County fire crews and air resources battle a brush fire in August. In all, California experience­d a much calmer fire season than in recent years.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times Los Angeles County fire crews and air resources battle a brush fire in August. In all, California experience­d a much calmer fire season than in recent years.

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