Cal Fire Q&A: How to keep your family safe and home protected this fire season
As fire season quickly approaches, families should start preparing their homes in case of an emergency. KCRA 3 spoke with Cal Fire Assistant Deputy Director Daniel Berlant, who provided some valuable tips on how to stay safe during fire season.
How winds factor into fire season
Berlant: The wind does a couple factors. One, especially north wind, they're a dry wind, so any moisture that may still be in the grass or the brush -- those north winds actually dry out the vegetation. Why that's important: Even though you have a plant that looks green, when those north winds blow and the humidity goes down, it sucks that moisture out. When a fire ignites, it's going to spread very quickly when vegetation is drier.
When is the best time to prepare for fire season?
Berlant: We need the public to be prepared now. We really started preparing at the end of last year and many many, months ago, in fact, we started hiring seasonal firefighters in the winter months. In February, the governor allowed us and gave us the ability to bring on somewhere around 1,300 additional seasonal firefighters. It gave us time to prepare early in the season, but we've already sued those firefighters, not just to respond to fires, but they've been doing fuel reduction work, they've been building fire breaks around communities, performing prescribed burns, so we are well prepared.
It's really important for all of us, Californians across the Sacramento region but across the state, to be ensuring that around our home, we're taking steps to clear dead vegetation take the time to really create an evacuation plan and other things. So this is the time of year, right now, today that we need to be having these conversations.
What should I have in my emergency go-kit?
Berlant: Even in my own house, all my important documents are in one location. A go-bag doesn't necessarily just mean things that you might need like clothes or phone chargers. But they're the valuable items. The memorabilia. The photographs that are irreplaceable. Birth certificates, legal documents, all of that really should be in one location in your home.
An emergency supply kit can be used for any disaster and that's where you have water, maybe copies of your prescriptions, a first aid kit, a flashlight, a spare pair of glasses. But then also for wildfires specifically having an evacuation kit is more. It includes all those and more personal items all in one centralized location.
Is there anything I can do right now to make my home safer?
Berlant: Defensible space. For those who don't know what it means, even if you live in a more urban area, in a city within city limits, it means getting rid of any dead vegetation at least 100 feet from your home. And I really make the point about if you live in the city you still could be affected, and you may not have weeds and grass around your home, but maybe you have leaves from the trees, pine needles, oak leaves that accumulate on your roof. Removing all dead vegetation, even on a city lot, is so critical, at least 100 feet from your home.
What is retrofitting?
Berlant: Retrofitting is something we need to be talking more about. It doesn't mean you need a contractor, it doesn't mean you're going to spend tens of thousands of dollars, there are actually items you can do yourself, as long as you have some mobility, you can do some of these items for less than 100 bucks, some even for free. That's why home hardening really shouldn't be something that you think is too hard to do, but hardening your home with these retrofits, in combination with defensible space, that's the key to increasing the house’s chance to surviving a wildfire.
Are there any state programs that will help with the cost of hardening my home?
Berlant: Let's talk about our low-cost retrofit list. We released a list on readyforwildfire.org, you can learn about defensible space, home hardening, evacuation plans -- all the different steps to be prepared. But the low-cost retrofit list has 10 things you can do for relatively cheap to help upgrade your building itself.
A good example is you can go to your local hardware store, for maybe $10, $15, you can buy metal meshing. They sell it in strands, and you can cut out that metal meshing, the circular shape of any of your vents in your home. Most attics have a vent, whether it be a square size or sometimes circular. Cutting out metal mesh that's a small size -- we still want to let air flow into the attic, but we want to stop those embers from getting inside and so using a vent that is 1/8th to even as small as 1/16th -- so very small size, is what will prevent an ember from getting inside.
Recently, the Legislature passed a bill that established a home hardening assistance program for low-income, disadvantaged, socially vulnerable populations.
And we're very quickly working with the state office of emergency services to eventually develop a grant program to get homeowners and communities hardened in areas that maybe they just can't afford it.
How do I properly dispose of debris near my home?
Berlant: One of our leading causes [of fires] are debris fires. These are vegetation, branches, leaves, debris. In rural areas, it's allowed in certain times of the year in certain communities, you can burn your leaves, you can burn your vegetation -- it is a fast and one of the easiest ways to get rid of vegetation in the winter months.
However, people are often doing their clearance this time of year, when conditions are right at the peak, at the edge, and under the wrong conditions, a simple pile of branches ignited on fire with the wind can carry and spread, so there are other ways of doing it.
You can compost it, you can mulch it. Many garbage companies actually have green waste products. Maybe you can't fit it all into a green waste bin that you might have in your home, but there are a number of dumps and other refuge centers that actually have green waste days where you can bring a truckload, or a trailer filled with branches or other landscape debris to the landfill and they're able to then compost it and in some cases turn it into energy.
Coals and barbeque fires aren't as common, but they do occur, especially if you're using something like coal or any type of campfire really, you have to ensure it's properly extinguished. That may be taking the coals and soaking them in a metal bucket of water, but its really important to not throw coals or anything that is hot right in the garbage can
What happens if someone decides to illegally burn on a day they're not supposed to?
Berlant: Most communities do have ordinances for a fine on a no-burn day. If you're in a rural area that Cal Fire protect, you are required to have a burn permit, and in most areas, you are required to have a second permit or make sure that day you're going to burn is a Burn Day by your local air pollution control district
Cal Fire has a civil cost recovery program. So when a fire occurs that is negligently started, illegally, meaning you burned on a day you weren't supposed to, you burned materials you can't burn, you burned without a burn permit -- and you start a wildfire, we actually have the legal authority and really the public requirement, that we can charge you for the cost of suppressing the wildfire. So it's not just a fine, it can be tens of thousands, in some cases even millions of dollars to recover the taxpayer dollars that it cost to fight that fire that was negligently started.
What should I do if my area is under an evacuation warning?
Berlant: If your car is in the garage, pull it out of the garage. Often times in these wildfires, the fire is going to burn down the power pole, which may fall and you may lose electricity in your area, and you don't want to get your car stuck in the garage.
And while garages built today have spring-loaded easy access, even without the power, I always recommend people pull their car out of the garage, pack it up then, then point it out to the street.
Also, anything that's flammable, if you have the time, bring it inside, or at least take it 30 feet away from the home. So remove flammable items from the home, if you have the time
If you have cats or other pets you can't easily capture, get them during the warning and get them ready to evacuate. In an emergency situation, cats especially are really good at hiding, and a lot of people will spend as much time as they can getting these members of their family.
Responses have been edited for style, clarity and brevity.