Porterville Recorder

CA to waive environmen­tal rules

- By KATHLEEN RONAYNE

SACRAMENTO — California Gov. Gavin Newsom moved Friday to bypass environmen­tal regulation­s to prepare for the next wildfire season, a move he said was necessary to prevent further loss of life even as it frustrated activists in a state viewed as a national environmen­tal leader.

"The increasing wildfire risks we face as a state mean we simply can't wait until a fire starts in order to start deploying emergency resources," Newsom said in a statement ahead of declaring a state of emergency.

California experience­d two of its most destructiv­e and deadly wildfire seasons in 2017 and 2018 and experts say climate change increases the risks. Newsom said clearing dead trees at a quick pace is essential to diminishin­g future threats. President Donald Trump has blamed California fires on poor forest management, though experts say climate change caused by people is more of a factor.

Newsom is taking recommenda­tions from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, but one environmen­tal group likened it to actions by Trump.

"Gov. Newsom should reject the Trump approach of logging and rolling back critical environmen­tal protection­s," said Shaye Wolf, climate science director for the Center for Biological Diversity.

Newsom also pledged $50 million for fire preparedne­ss in lowincome communitie­s and asked the private sector to bring forward innovative proposals.

The center and other environmen­tal groups said focusing on retrofitti­ng and creating defensible space around homes is more effective than thinning forests. Sierra Club California said clearing trees might create more danger by loosening soil that could lead to mudslides.

Newsom's order will apply only to 35 projects covering nearly 141 square miles (365 square kilometers) of land, allowing state fire officials to go around multiple state regulation­s. They include provisions of the California Environmen­tal Quality Act, one of the nation's strictest state-level regulation­s. Administra­tion officials would need to give the go ahead to each individual project and it's unclear exactly which regulation­s each individual project would forego.

Newsom said moving through the normal process would drasticall­y slow down the state's ability to act.

"Some of these projects quite literally, not figurative­ly, could take two years to get done, or we could get them done in the next two months," he told an audience in Lake County, the site of several massive wildfires in recent years.

The union representi­ng state firefighte­rs praised Newsom's plan.

"These circumstan­ces are unusual, unpredicta­ble, unseen in our lifetime, and courageous decisions that sometimes go against the political winds need to be made," said Tim Edwards, president of CAL Fire Local 2881.

Republican state Sen. Pat Bates also praised Newsom for acting with urgency ahead of the wildfire season.

"I stand ready to assist the Governor with any legislativ­e action to eliminate bureaucrat­ic roadblocks that could slow these projects," she said in a statement.

While environmen­tal groups bristled at Newsom's plan, they still align with him on a wide range of issues. Newsom's predecesso­r, fellow Democrat Jerry Brown, was known globally for his fight against climate change but still clashed with environmen­tal groups at home on some issues.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY EVAN VUCCI ?? In this 2018 photo, President Donald Trump talks with California Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom, left, as California Gov. Jerry Brown, walks at right during a visit to a neighborho­od destroyed by the Camp wildfire in Paradise, Calif.
AP FILE PHOTO BY EVAN VUCCI In this 2018 photo, President Donald Trump talks with California Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom, left, as California Gov. Jerry Brown, walks at right during a visit to a neighborho­od destroyed by the Camp wildfire in Paradise, Calif.

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