Los Angeles Times

In a hellish year, firefighte­rs win a couple in O. C.

Timing, water drops and building codes prevent disaster in Irvine, Yorba Linda.

- By Joseph Serna

The conditions seemed ripe for disaster.

Gusting Santa Ana winds had grounded waterdumpi­ng aircraft for hours, and f lames were spreading across a tinder- dry fuel bed. Downwind sat a tangled maze of suburban streets where more than 80,000 people were ordered to evacuate.

Had this week’s Silverado f ire began anywhere else, and at any other time, f irefighter­s said it could have been the latest disaster in California’s busiest f ire year on record — a time when firefighti­ng resources have been stretched perilously thin.

But this latest f ire started on the outskirts of master- planned Orange County, where the roads are smooth and wide, communitie­s were built under the state’s most recent fire code and the largest regional firef ighting force in the world was at the ready and just a phone call away.

Despite 45- mph gusts launching embers into the suburban sprawl, where cars sat bumper to bumper trying to f lee the oncoming f lames, not a single home was lost or seriously damaged. In the end, thanks to a semi- formal agreement among the region’s biggest f ire department­s and the f irst- ever use of the world’s biggest, fastest water- dropping helicopter at night, crews were able to stand their ground, keeping the f lames largely north of Portola Parkway, a major road that divides the subdivisio­ns of Irvine from the back country. “In some ways, we got a

WASHINGTON — Heralded as one of the greatest success stories of the Endangered Species Act, the gray wolf will lose federal protection­s under a Trump administra­tion decision announced Thursday.

The decision from the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the second time in the last decade that federal wildlife officials have tried to remove gray wolves from the endangered species list, where they say the animals no longer belong now that they’re thriving in the wild.

Like the previous attempt, which took place under the Obama administra­tion, this latest effort is expected to face legal challenges. Conservati­onists maintain that wolves have returned only to certain parts of their former habitat and say the agency is acting prematurel­y.

“We absolutely plan to challenge it,” said Jamie Rappaport Clark, chief executive of the conservati­on advocacy group Defenders of Wildlife and a former director of the Fish and Wildlife Service under President Clinton. “We believe they’ve declared victory too soon.”

Hunted and harassed, poisoned and trapped, gray wolves were near extinction in the continenta­l United States by the time they were added to the endangered list in 1974. At the time, about 1,000 wolves remained. They now number more than 6,000.

“After more than 45 years as a listed species, the gray wolf has exceeded all conservati­on goals for recovery,” Interior Secretary David Bernhardt said in a statement.

But many biologists, though thrilled by the population growth, say the species hasn’t fully recovered throughout its historical habitat. Before humans began a campaign to eradicate them, gray wolves roamed throughout most of the U. S.

Today, they are primarily found in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, as well as the Northern Rockies, where they have been successful­ly reintroduc­ed.

But outside those clusters, wolves haven’t establishe­d viable population­s, said Joanna Lambert, a professor of animal ecology at the University of Colorado Boulder. Although parts of Colorado, Utah and California could be ideal wolf habitat, there are hardly any packs in those states.

It’s unclear whether gray wolves will be able to expand their range without the federal protection­s they’ve had for nearly 50 years.

If the courts uphold the Trump administra­tion’s decision, then gray wolves will be subject to individual states’ rules on hunting and trapping, as well as private landowners who run the gamut from tolerant to hostile.

In California and Washington state, wolves would still be protected under those states’ endangered species laws.

But Utah allows wildlife managers to trap and euthanize wolves to prevent them from reestablis­hing themselves. And in Montana and Idaho, where Congress intervened to strip wolves of federal protection­s, nearly 500 have been killed in the last year, according to Lambert.

“I really do worry about what’s going to happen in some of these states,” she said. “There’s going to have to be a lot of eyes on the ground overseeing those population­s.”

Soon after wolves were reintroduc­ed to the Northern Rockies in the mid- 1990s, efforts began to remove their protected status. The return of the country’s most controvers­ial predator drove a wedge between ranchers, who saw them as a threat to livestock, and environmen­tal groups. Hunters complained about having to compete with wolves for deer and elk. In parts of the West where belief in small government is sacrosanct, the wolf became a symbol of burdensome regulation.

Many of the attempts to weaken protection­s were overturned by federal judges. Though wolves have been delisted in Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, eastern Oregon and eastern Washington, the Obama administra­tion’s efforts to end protection for the species in the Great Lakes region was undone by a court order in 2014.

Kaitlynn Glover, executive director of the Public Lands Council, a trade organizati­on representi­ng ranchers, said this time is different.

“The science is more up to date. The species is in very good shape. The population­s are robust,” she said. “Certainly the Endangered Species Act has a role in protecting those species that are imperiled, but once a species demonstrat­es they have recovered, that federal attention should be refocused.”

However, there are indication­s that the Trump administra­tion’s decision may be vulnerable to legal challenge. In a peer review of the agency’s proposal, experts on the gray wolf criticized the scientific analysis underpinni­ng the decision to delist the species, writing that the agency’s conclusion­s were based on factual omissions and errors. One expert noted that the proposal barely considered the effects of climate change, which federal wildlife officials claimed would not affect wolves.

Whatever the outcome of the fight over federal protection­s, conservati­onists are taking steps to shore up support for wolves at the state level.

In Colorado, environmen­tal and animal protection groups are leading a campaign to pass Propositio­n 114, a ballot measure that would require state biologists to reintroduc­e gray wolves in the state’s western public lands by 2023. The proposal is unpreceden­ted — no other state has taken the lead in reintroduc­ing a federally endangered, native species to its home territory.

The campaign has drawn opposition from ranchers, farmers and hunters, who see the dispute as an attempt by city- dwelling Coloradans to push their beliefs about animal rights onto rural communitie­s that will have to coexist with wolves. Although the measure would require the state to compensate ranchers for livestock killed by wolves, opponents have argued that bringing back a native predator would lead to severe f inancial losses.

Wolves have been largely absent from Colorado since the 1940s, and the state wildlife commission has resisted efforts to reintroduc­e them. A few adventurou­s animals have made their way into the state from time to time — a pack was reported to be living in the northweste­rn part of the state this year — but groups that favor reintroduc­tion say it’s unlikely they’ll reestablis­h themselves naturally.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? AN O. C. f iref ighter prepares to defend a home as f lames near Irvine’s Orchard Hills neighborho­od.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times AN O. C. f iref ighter prepares to defend a home as f lames near Irvine’s Orchard Hills neighborho­od.
 ?? U. S. Fish and Wildlif e Ser vi ce ?? THE GRAY WOLF has rebounded in its U. S. population since the 1970s, but its range remains limited.
U. S. Fish and Wildlif e Ser vi ce THE GRAY WOLF has rebounded in its U. S. population since the 1970s, but its range remains limited.

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