Evacuation route fully funded
A project to upgrade Mount Provo Road to create an emergency evacuation route for hundreds of Ponderosa Hills residents is now fully funded, according to Tuolumne Safe, a newly created nonprofit organization that’s behind the project.
The funding comes from donors who pledged more than $14,000 for transportation, compacting and grading of $11,500 worth of road rock donated by Blue Mountain Minerals, a news release said.
Final work on the project is expected to be finished before the end of October 2020.
Donors who contributed to the project include Sonora Area Foundation’s Community Recovery Fund, which awarded a $10,000 grant made possible with other funds held by Sonora Area Foundation, including the TUCARE Community Wildfire Protection Fund, Tuolumne
Sunrise Fund, Shane & Perkins Charitable Fund, Helm Family Fund, and Caldwell Insurance Community Fund.
Donations from Tuolumne County businesses include $1,500 from Coleman & Horowitt, LLP Attorneys At Law; $1,000 from Healy Homes, Inc.; and $500 each from The Law Offices of
Nathan Nutting and MGK Visions, Inc.
Tuolumne County residents who donated include Cody Ritts, Curtis Doty, Abigail Oliva, Barbara Farkas, Joshua Milborne, Kaenan Whitman, Isabel Fernandez, Gary Geisenhofer, Debra Faustino, Emily Memmer, Mark and Joan Grantham, Helen Betzler, Sarah Calabrese, Josh and Julie Price, Stephen Woodward, Sheri Sanders, Kyle Dooley, Scarlett Kirk, and John Tyler. Neon Media Co. donated web services.
More than 800 people and 330 homes are in Ponderosa Hills, which has experienced a handful of fires in the area since the 1970s.
The last major blaze in watersheds around Ponderosa Hills may have been back in the 1940s or 1950s, said Anaiah Kirk, the District 3 supervisor for Tuolumne County, who is one of seven directors for the Tuolumne Safe nonprofit.
Tuolumne Safe is a 501(c)3, meaning it’s approved by the Internal Revenue Service as a taxexempt, charitable organization.
As of last week, donations to complete the Mount Provo Road project totaled $150,000 in labor, and materials and completed work donated by Frontier Communications, Sierra Mountain Construction, Inc., Cal Fire, Tuolumne Utilities District, and Blue Mountain Minerals.