In 2008, Paradise was spared.
That June, a fire broke out in one of the canyons southwest of the Butte County town and quickly roared east, up and over the ridge. Thousands scrambled to evacuate, clogging the single road to safety. A sudden wind shift allowed firefighters to cordon off the flames, but the experience left residents intimately aware of the risks of living in Paradise.
State lawmakers have been aware of the risk, too. In color-coded fire-hazard maps maintained by Cal Fire, Paradise is a bright red island in a churning sea of pink, orange, and yellowโall denoting various levels of danger.
โIt is not a great feeling โฆ to have highlighted an area for its vulnerability, and then having this come to fruition,โ said Dave Sapsis, a Cal Fire researcher who helped designate the state agencyโs โFire Hazard Severity Zones.โ
As California grapples with an increasing possibility that the once-in-a-century wildfires that have torched Paradise and Malibu are becoming once-a-year occurrences, larger swaths of the stateโs population may find themselves living in the crimson regions of those maps. This presents lawmakers with a dilemma: Should they impose costly and politically unpalatable regulations on homeowners, and rip up existing infrastructureโor simply accept the risk?
โWeโve got to take intelligent precautions in how we design our cities,โ Gov. Jerry Brown said at a press conference with U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke last week. โThe zoning and the planning has to take into account the threat of fires, (and) the building of appropriate shelters, so that people can always find a way to escapeโand then of course, (there are) all the things weโre doing to mitigate climate change. All of it. Itโs a big agenda. But what weโre paying this week is a very small fraction of what is needed over the years and decades.โ
With wildfires growing ever more ferociousโa product of a changing climate, forests increasingly packed with dead and dry kindling, and the encroachment of development into stateโs wildernessโit can be hard to tell which parts of California should be considered safe anymore. Coffey Park, the suburban subdivision of Santa Rosa that burned in last yearโs firestorms, was designated a low-fire-risk area by Cal Fire.
The agency is now in the process of updating its hazard maps, with an expected draft publication date of next summer.
For state Sen. Mike McGuire, whose district includes Santa Rosa, this yearโs fires raise a number of โdifficult yet necessaryโ questions about where and how communities are placedโand then replaced.
โWhat type of rules and regulations will there be if homes will be allowed to be rebuilt?โ he said. โFor example, defensible space, landscape restrictions, no longer allowing developments to be built with one way in and just one way out. โฆ If there have been multiple fires over multiple years, are we truly going to rebuild?
โBeing very candid with you, the discussion has just begunโbut this is a discussion that we are going to have to have, because this is the new reality,โ he said.
Sen. Scott Wiener of San Francisco has championed giving the state more power to override local planning decisions to meet statewide housing goals.
โJob one is to help the people whose lives have been so dramatically altered by this disaster, but we also need to look at the long-term picture of this new normal,โ Wiener said. โHistorically, we have allowed local communities almost complete autonomy in making housing-related decisions, whether that decision is not to allow new housing, whether that decision is to ban apartment buildings, or whether that decision is to allow a lot of housing in very fire-prone areas.โ
Wiener says he is not suggesting that development be banned outright anywhere, but that the state should impose standards that โreflect our needs as a state and reflect risks.โ
Between 1990 and 2010, an estimated 45 percent of all new housing units built in California were constructed in what experts refer to as the wildland-urban interfaceโwhere the stateโs cul-de-sacโd suburban subdivisions and rural communities meet its flammable forests and shrub fields. The encroachment of homes into undeveloped areas creates a much larger and challenging front for firefighters to defend.
โYou get this very different fire dynamic once it gets into a heavily populated area,โ said Anu Kramer, a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who co-authored the research upon which the estimate is based. โYou have cars on fire, propane tanks exploding, and burning houses radiating a lot of heat, which can contribute to neighboring houses igniting. Thatโs very different from trees and shrubs burning in a forest.โ
Strict rules for new homes, but not the old
California already has among the strictest fire-minded regulations on construction. Since 2008, any building constructed in areas designated at very high fire risk must be built with specific roofs, vents and other materials designed to resist fire and keep out flying embers. Homeowners are also required to maintain a perimeter of brush-free defensible space around their houses.
Legislation passed this year extends those restrictions, without exception, to development on local as well as state land. Cal Fire also operates a consulting arm for local governments hoping to make more fire-appropriate land-use decisions.
But some of those regulations were written with a certain type of community in mind, said Kramer: โVacation homes in Tahoe with wood roofs and pine trees over the house. โฆ A lot of the regulations are geared towards that quintessential idea.โ
The charred homes of more urban enclaves such as Malibu and Santa Rosa were not destroyed by โa giant tsunami wave of flame,โ said Chris Dicus, a Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo professor and president of the Association for Fire Ecology. Instead, they burn โfrom the inside out after embers get inside the house through vents and windows or under doors.โ Those embers may have traveled from the front of the original fire miles away.
While many existing regulations require new construction be โhardenedโ to embers, they donโt apply to existing homes. That leaves many of Californiaโs at-risk communities stuck with old, fire-prone homes, and inadequate or constrained infrastructure.
โWeโre currently paying for the sins of the past, where subdivisions and other developments were built without fire in mind,โ said Dicus.
Some changes are relatively easy to make even after construction: installing ember-resistant vents, weather-sealing garage doors, and clearing flammable items like lawn chairs off the propertyโs perimeter can keep embers from starting new spot fires. Other changes are pricier: regular brush clearing, double-paned windows to reduce radiant heat inside a home, replacing wood roofs with metal, and installing fire shutters.
You have a lot of homeowners who โmaybe canโt afford to upgrade and retrofitโ their homes, said Molly Mowery, president of Wildfire Planning International. โWe know now what keeps us safer, but you canโt just change that overnight.โ
Homeowner help: Subsidies, rebates and discounts?
One possible solution, said Sen. Wiener: the state could help current homeowners make those changes.
โWhat we donโt want to do is force people out of their homes because they canโt affordโfor lack of a better phraseโa โwildfire retrofit,โโ he said. He added that he would consider โsubsidy and rebate programs โฆ but I donโt want to pretend like I know what all the answers are.โ
Absent new government assistance, insurers could encourage homeowners to be more fire-conscious. In the same way that health insurance providers might offer their policyholders discounted gym memberships, home insurers could cut a deal for those who install ember-resistant vents.
But only one major insurer in California currently offers discounts to encourage fire-safe behavior. According to a recent RAND Corporation report, thatโs because most providers argue that state regulators donโt let them charge homeowners living in high-fire-risk areas a high enough premium to justify a discount. The state Insurance Department counters that such rate hikes wouldnโt be justified based on the evidence.
The study also found that most homeowners in high-risk areas are just purchasing less coverage and opting for plans with higher deductibles, leaving them more exposed.
And then there are changes that homeowners alone cannot make.
Calli-Jane DeAnda, executive director of the Butte County Fire Safe Council, spent last year promoting the regionโs evacuation plan, so she knew what to do as soon as reports came in that fire was moving toward Paradise.
โI had turned on the townโs AM 1500 radio station, and they were notifying residents that an evacuation center had been set up and that certain zones needed to be evacuating,โ she said. โSo I felt kind of calm โฆ like, โOh, this is how the plan was supposed to go.โโ
But that plan soon met a bottleneck on Skyway, the main route out of Paradise.
DeAnda said she got on the road at around 8:20 a.m.โalong with hundreds of her neighbors. She wasnโt out of the foothills and away from the spot fires popping up along the side of the road for an hour and a half. Itโs a drive that would typically take her 25 minutes.
Nearly a dozen of the bodies identified in the devastation left by the Camp Fire were found in their cars, stuck in the crush of evacuation traffic.
Paradise had an evacuation plan. But the plan, and the townโs cramped, 19th-century layout, were not prepared for a fire of such intensity or speed. And in that respect, Paradise is not alone: The hills above Berkeley and Oakland, where 25 people died in a fire in 1991, also featured narrow, winding roads that made escape more difficult.
โI worry about another deadly fire in the East Bay,โ said Kramer, the researcher. โIt burned before, and itโs going to burn again. And when it does, itโs going to be really bad.โ
To rebuild โฆ or say โenough is enoughโ?
In the aftermath of fire, local governments often face an impossible task of balancing the need to rebuild as quickly as possibleโto get those who have lost everything back into their homesโwith the need to prepare for the worst.
After three fires raged through the foothills of Butte County in 2008, including the one that prompted the first evacuation of Paradise, the county Board of Supervisors made the building code more flexible for homeowners to rebuild: Homeowners could have their permit applications expedited, and use lumber located on their own property for construction. This summer, the board renewed and expanded the exemption.
The building code carve-out represents a necessary compromise between smart planning and the needs of homeowner, many of whom could not afford to build a new house up to the current code, said DeAnda. Without the exemption, she said, many homeowners would have likely replaced their burnt homes with modular houses or trailers, which she said often present a bigger fire risk.
DeAnda, who spends most of her time raising awareness about fire safety across the country, lives in one such โancient mobile homeโ in Concow, just east of Paradise. โItโs going up in 8 minutes if it catches on fire,โ she said.
โThere is a lot of emphasis, and understandably so, on prioritizing getting back to normal,โ said Dr. Miranda Mockrin, a research scientist at the U.S. Forest Service who has studied how communities respond to wildfire. She said most local governments avoid using building restrictions and regulations, instead favoring less-coercive, voluntary fire safety programs and educational outreach.
But rebuilding is a slow process. If communities want to require more fire-conscious development, โthere is time,โ she said.
For Chris Coursey, the mayor of Santa Rosa, which lost some 3,000 homes last year, there was never a question about whether to allow the incinerated communities of Coffey Park and Fountain Grove to rebuild.
โUnder state law, people have the right to rebuild a legal home that they lose in a disaster. We donโt have the ability to tell them that they canโt rebuildโ he said.
Nor would he want to, he added.
โIf you live in California, youโre going to face an earthquake or a fire or a flood or a mudslide at some pointโthereโs no way to mitigate all of that risk,โ he said.
Santa Rosa officials, he added, are trying to drive more development into the cityโs downtown, away from its more-vulnerable edges. Since last year, nearly 60 homes have been reconstructed. Theyโve been built up to the new, municipal fire codes, and many homeowners have elected to use more fire-resistant materials. But Coursey said only so much can be done to prepare for catastrophe.
โI think weโre more fire-aware; I think weโre more fire-ready,โ he said. โBut if that wind and that combination of low humidity and high temperature and high winds happened again, I think weโre vulnerable.โ
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