Los Angeles Times

Budget gives boost to fire funding

Governor’s spending proposal includes extra money for battling big blazes.

- CHRISTINE MAI-DUC christine.maiduc@latimes.com

SACRAMENTO — After one of the most destructiv­e fire seasons in state history and with an eye toward the increased potential effects of climate change, Gov. Jerry Brown has proposed spending more on fighting wildfires than the state has in more than a decade.

Brown’s $170.7-billion budget proposal includes a $719-million one-time drought package, including an extra $215 million to the state’s emergency fund for battling big blazes.

The extra cash, along with increased funding for healthy forests and bolstering levies, takes into account the “new normal” as it relates to climate change and the state’s historic drought, officials say.

“As we stand here today, while we’ve had a great, wet week here in Sacramento, and we’re feeling pretty soggy and good about it … we’ve got a long ways to go before we’re comfortabl­e that our drought is over,” said Mark Cowin, director of the state’s Department of Water Resources.

“We are fully budgeting for the drought as if it’s going into a fifth year,” John Laird, secretary of the state’s Natural Resources Agency, said in a conference call.

With continuing drought comes fear of an explosive fire season, even with record rainfall.

The governor has allocated $424 million for the California Department of Fire and Forestry’s emergency fund, which would be the highest budgeted amount in more than 10 years and at a near historic level, according to figures from CalFire and the state Department of Finance. More than half of that money was added in anticipati­on of another especially treacherou­s fire season.

“Anticipati­ng long-term weather conditions – how bad the Santa Anas are going to blow, what fire conditions are going to be, we just don’t know,” said H.D. Palmer, a spokesman for Brown’s Department of Finance. “But what we do know is that conditions have changed in California to the extent that we should change our budgeting process to account for that.”

Also included in Brown’s budget is $100 million to bolster the state’s levy system, $150 million to help with reforestat­ion and healthy forests, more than $240 million to help with cleanup of fires in Lake and Calaveras counties, and an additional $17 million to help CalFire bolster staffing in 21 emergency command centers across the state.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States