Los Angeles Times

Harris unveils funding for wildfire season

- By Courtney Subramania­n

WASHINGTON — Storm-ravaged California­ns are still digging out from historic levels of snowfall and girding for more heavy rain this week. But Biden administra­tion officials are looking ahead to a wildfire season that could bring more devastatio­n once the state dries out.

Vice President Kamala Harris detailed $197 million in new federal grants on Monday to help fortify highrisk communitie­s against wildfires.

More than 100 communitie­s scattered across 22 states and seven tribes will receive funding to supplement pay for wildland firefighte­rs and provide housing for fire personnel as part of the Biden administra­tion’s wildfire defense grant program.

“We used to talk about wildfire season. Now, wildfire season is all year round,” Harris said on a press call with Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack and Infrastruc­ture Implementa­tion Coordinato­r Mitch Landrieu. “We know the best time to fight a fire is before it starts.”

Twenty-nine grants will go to California communitie­s and organizati­ons.

Kern County will receive $2.2 million to train firefighte­rs to conduct controlled burns and educate homeowners about reducing the risk of wildfires, including cleaning rain gutters of dry sticks and leaves, which can be flammable agents, and covering vents to block flying embers.

Butte County’s fire department will get $1.5 million to purchase excavator equipment for an 8,000 -acre hazardous fuel reduction project and $4.9 million for defensible space inspection­s, which encourage homeowners to clear vegetation around their houses to reduce the possibilit­y of wildfires setting them ablaze.

Tuolumne County will receive $10 million to inspect 1,290 homes, clear brush along approximat­ely 23 miles of road and promote wildfire management education.

The grants will also boost U.S. Forest Service and Department of Interior funding for prescribed burning, brush-clearing and other wildfire-prevention tactics.

Last year’s bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill and President Biden’s signature climate and social spending package allocated $7 billion in funding for government agencies involved in wildfire management. The latest funding is an initial round and more money will be made available to other communitie­s affected by wildfires, Vilsack said.

California’s wet season isn’t over. Central and Southern California residents are bracing for more rainfall after 11 atmospheri­c river storms that dumped winter rain and snow across the state. The storm systems, which pull moisture from the tropical Pacific, triggered mass flooding and breached levees.

Though the heavy rain and snow have brought some relief to the droughtstr­icken state, the precipitat­ion could lead to extra growth of brush and grass that quickly turn to kindling in the summer and autumn months, according to Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA.

He pointed to the last wettest winter on record in parts of Northern California. A long, hot summer followed the winter of 2016-17, ultimately triggering the destructiv­e Northern California firestorm in October 2017, including the Tubbs fire that devastated Santa Rosa. The severity of this year’s fire season will depend on how quickly the snowpack melts and whether temperatur­es heat up this spring and summer, Swain said.

“Just because we have a really wet winter does not mean that it’s obviously a mild fire season everywhere,” he added. “But it does change the dynamics.”

California wildfires have increased in both size and intensity over the last two decades, a pattern that has left little time for recovery between blazes. Harris recalled visiting communitie­s ravaged by the Tubbs fire in 2017, the Camp fire in 2018 and the Creek fire in 2020.

“I have seen entire neighborho­ods burned to the ground. I have been in neighborho­ods where the only thing left standing [were] the chimneys, which looked almost like tombstones,” she said.

Also on Monday, the United Nations released a bleak report that called on rich countries, including the U.S., to reach net zero emissions by 2040, a decade earlier than developing countries. The world is likely to exceed its climate target of limiting warming to 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit above preindustr­ial times in the 2030s, a threshold that would yield catastroph­ic climate disasters, the report found.

“The assessment is dire,” Harris said of the U.N. report. “Our future is not yet written and the solutions are at hand. So let that be an alarm that lets us know that we must act with haste and we can actually, right now, have an impact on how this all plays out.”

 ?? Noah Berger Associated Press ?? JESSICA BELL captures video as the Dixie fire burns in Plumas National Forest, Calif., in 2021. Vice President Kamala Harris has detailed $197 million in grants to help fortify high-risk communitie­s against wildfires.
Noah Berger Associated Press JESSICA BELL captures video as the Dixie fire burns in Plumas National Forest, Calif., in 2021. Vice President Kamala Harris has detailed $197 million in grants to help fortify high-risk communitie­s against wildfires.

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