Times-Herald (Vallejo)

State eases way for land clearing to prevent wildfires

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO » California regulators said Tuesday that they have streamline­d the state’s permit process to make it faster to approve tree-thinning projects designed to slow massive wildfires that have devastated communitie­s in recent years.

The state Board of Forestry and Fire Protection approved a vegetation management program based on more than a decade of analysis of the potential environmen­tal damage from removing different types of fuel, ranging from alpine trees to chaparral.

That will allow new projects to use the preapprove­d environmen­tal analyses rather than starting fresh each time to meet the requiremen­ts of the California’s strict environmen­tal laws.

Gov. Gavin Newsom equated it to the emergency orders he issued nearly a year ago to speed up approval of 35 forest management projects intended to help protect more than 200 communitie­s in high-risk areas.

The orders suspended some requiremen­ts and regulation­s, which his office said reduced the usual three- to five-year timeline to less than a year while still protecting the environmen­t.

The projects generally involve thinning or clearing trees or brush along wide paths near vulnerable communitie­s, so that wildfires slow down and can be contained while they move through areas with less fuel. Other projects aim to restore a more natural balance between fire and forests.

Critics say the fuel-thinning projects wouldn’t have slowed the winddriven infernos that devastated communitie­s in recent years and largely leveled the town of Paradise more than a year ago. Nor will they help with slower-moving forest fires unless the breaks in fuel are maintained for generation­s, they note, including by weeding out more flammable brush and grass that would naturally grow where trees are removed.

State regulators say they expect the streamline­d process to create efficienci­es that will help California eventually meet its goal of treating 500,000 acres of non-federal land annually. The state is responsibl­e for more than 20 million acres of wildland, but the new program will not be used in considerin­g plans for commercial timber harvests or residentia­l developmen­t.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly criticized the state’s Democratic leaders for not doing enough to manage forests to prevent wildfires.

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