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To: Broken_Clock who wrote (25156)1/16/2025 2:25:14 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 26004
 
Here’s how California has increased wildfire response and forest management in the face of a hotter, drier climate | Governor of California

Jan 13, 2025

Here’s how California has increased wildfire response and forest management in the face of a hotter, drier climate

Protecting Californians in a hotter, drier worldGovernor Newsom has added unprecedented resources to support wildfire response, and dramatically ramped up state work to increase wildland and forest resilience.

Here are steps the state has taken to protect Californians from wildfires include:

Biggest state investment in fire response in history

  • Investing in wildfire response and prevention. The Governor’s Budget reflects a total of $4 billion which maintains $2.5 billion in prior investments and commits another $1.5 billion over the next several years.
  • More boots on the ground than ever before. Last year, Governor Newsom invested $2 billion to support CAL FIRE operations, a 47% increase since 2018. These investments have helped build CAL FIRE from 5,829 positions to 10,741 in that same period. The Administration is implementing shorter workweeks for state firefighters to prioritize firefighter well-being while adding 2,400 additional state firefighters to CAL FIRE’s ranks over the next five years.
Expanded aerial fleet

  • Expanding the world’s largest aerial firefighting fleet. Governor Newsom has overseen the expansion of California’s aerial firefighting fleet, including the addition of more than 16 helicopters with several equipped for night operations, expanded five helitack bases, and assumed ownership of seven C-130 air tankers, making it the largest fleet of its kind globally. The state also adds to its world-leading air attack capacity through recent new funding to contract 24 additional non-state owned firefighting aircraft.
More forest management and prescribed burns than ever before

  • Preventing wildfire through forest and land management. The state is investing $2.5 billion to ramp up and implement the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Action Plan, increasing the pace of fuel reduction, prescribed fire, and forest health. 100% of the 99 key actions outlined in the plan are underway or completed. This is in addition to $200 million invested annually through 2028-29 for healthy forest and fire prevention programs.
  • Using controlled burns to build community and forest resilience. California launched its Strategic Plan for Expanding the Use of Beneficial Fire to expand the use of prescribed fire and cultural burning to build forest and community resilience. Key goals from the plan are already in action to increase the use of Prescribed Fires, and prescribed fire activity has more than doubled between 2021 and 2023.
  • Tracking wildfire prevention. California recently unveiled newly updated, first-of-their-kind dashboards that will help Californians track the state’s wildfire prevention work.
New technology to prevent and fight fire

  • Cutting-edge drone technology. CAL FIRE has doubled its use of drones for critical tasks like aerial ignition during prescribed burns, wildfire containment, and real-time assessments.
  • Artificial intelligence and real-time data tools. The state is leveraging AI-powered tools to spot fires quicker and the Fire Integrated Real-Time Intelligence System (FIRIS) to provide real-time mapping of wildfires.
  • Advanced mapping and satellite technology. California has partnered with the U.S. Department of Defense to use satellites for wildfire detection and invested in LiDAR technology to create detailed 3D maps of high-risk areas, helping firefighters better understand and navigate complex terrains.
  • Greater capabilities for incident reporting. CAL FIRE has expanded its capabilities for incident reporting at fire.ca.gov, updating the incident map with near real-time information about firefighting aircraft activity, 3-D maps with evacuation orders, local shelter information, road closures, and more.



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (25156)1/16/2025 3:58:10 PM
From: LoneClone3 Recommendations

Recommended By
Mannie
S. maltophilia
Wharf Rat

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 26004
 
Meanwhile, actual scientists and climatologists point out how the fires of the type that officials are being blamed for would not have arisen if it was not for the effects of climate change creating these dangerous conditions.

Yes, as I have been saying, officials have been mishandling the fire threat in LA for decades, and were certainly not prepared for what happened, just like happened in BC and Alberta and Yukon and Northwest Territories and Australia and Hawaii and Spain and Greece and Siberia, etc. etc. etc., all of which are experiencing fire threats of a scale and type not seen before in recorded history. I guess that's all the fault of the mayor of LA, especially if she belongs to the Democratic Party.

I guess for you guys it is more important to find someone to blame rather than understanding the root causes, expressing compassion for and assisting the victims, and making sure something like this doesn't happen again in the future.

LC