Wildfire Mitigation Strategies

There are three main mitigation strategies to reduce structure loss in communities: home hardening, defensible space, and hazardous fuel reduction. At this time, we are providing assistance for hazardous fuel reduction, but in order to create truly fire-adapted communities it is important that all three strategies are implemented together.

Home Hardening involves changing housing materials, design, and maintenance in order to decrease the risk of homes burning in a wildland fire. Defensible Space includes treating and reducing the fuels in the immediate vicinity of your home to slow the speed and flame height of oncoming fire and reduces the possibility of your home catching fire. Defensible space also provides evacuation routes and a safer environment for firefighters to defend structures.

The focus of the Foundation’s projects is Hazardous Fuel Reduction. Hazardous fuels reduction aims to reduce the continuity of fuels outside the defensible space zone in order to prevent surface fires from becoming high intensity, high severity crown fires. It involves reducing ladder and surface fuels as well as tree crown density by spacing trees and shrubs vertically and horizontally. The longevity of these measures is improved by increasing the height of overstory trees and allowing larger, mature trees to dominate a greater proportion of sites, thereby shading out and controlling understory fuels.

The fuel treatments will be targeted to reduce fire intensity around communities. Strategically placed fuel treatments not only protect structures and evacuation routes, but also can protect the surrounding wildlands from human-caused fires initiated in urban areas. Ecological benefits include controlling undesirable vegetation such as invasive species, improvement of wildlife habitat and rangeland for grazing, and protection of wetlands and riparian corridors.

 

Shasta County Hazardous Fuel Reduction Project

The McConnell Foundation has been awarded multiple grants to mitigate wildfire impacts around Shasta County communities. The goal of the Project is to reduce risk of wildfire along certain critical corridors within high-priority wildland urban interface (WUI) areas by reducing hazardous fuels.

The first phase of the Project requires a preliminary site assessment to determine the potential boundaries of the Project Area. Site assessments will determine where fuel treatments can occur and will take into consideration environmental constraints (including archaeological, biological and environmental surveys), topography, fuel types, and fuel loading relative to beneficial outcomes. Phase 1 will begin in October 2022 and take approximately 12 to 18 months. To implement Phase 1 work landowners are required to sign a Right-of-Entry agreement. The Right-of-Entry agreement only authorizes the site assessment and environmental surveys and does not authorize the fuel treatment work. Landowners will be contacted before any project personnel show up on their property.

The second phase of the Project will be removal of hazardous fuels based on landowner objectives. Before any hazardous fuels reduction work begins, landowners will approve a site-specific work plan that details the locations and specifications of any fuel treatments. Signing the Right-of-Entry agreement alone will not authorize fuel treatments. The landowner will have the opportunity to meet with professionals, outline their individual objectives, review the site-specific work plan, and sign the work plan authorizing treatments. No vegetation management work will occur if the landowner does not sign the site-specific work plan. Phase 2 will begin in approximately 12 to 18 months after Phase 1 and last approximately 24 months.

 

LINK TO PARTICIPATION MAP:

The following map link shows the level of participation, with parcels highlighted in green showing where landowners have returned a Right-of-Entry agreement. Landowners should be aware that a low level of participation might jeopardize the ability for a certain segment to receive fuel reduction treatments because there is not enough continuity in fuel treatments to be effective wildfire mitigation for the whole community. For this reason, we encourage all landowners to sign the Right- of-Entry agreement , allowing the landowner to have on-site consultations with professionals and discuss how fuel reduction treatments may benefit their property and help protect their community.

Shasta County Wildfire Mitigation Project Area Base Map

The map below identifies the 21 Project Activity Areas that make up The McConnell Foundation’s project scope.

basemap_website_2024

PROJECT CONTACT INFORMATION:

For the Shasta County Wildfire Mitigation work outlined above, The McConnell Foundation is working in partnership with VESTRA Resources, Inc. Please direct all Project-related inquiries to:

VESTRA Resources, Inc.
Kathryn Miller
(530) 223-2585
grantsupport@vestra.com
www.vestra.com/

 

Forms for Landowners in the Project Area:

The links below provide access to project documents and information for only those that are included in the Project Areas. Landowners with property within the Project Area received information from us by mail. If you are unsure if your property falls within the Project Area, please contact VESTRA Resources.

Right-of-Entry Agreement

Withdrawal Form

Schedule of Community Events

 

Shasta County Wildfire Mitigation Resources

For additional resources on wildfire mitigation and ecosystem management, contact the following:

CAL FIRE Shasta-Trinity Unit: www.fire.ca.gov/FacebookTwitter

Western Shasta Resource Conservation District: www.westernshastarcd.org/Facebook

Fall River Resource Conservation District: www.fallriverrcd.org/Facebook

Shasta County Fire Safe Council: www.shastafiresafe.org/Facebook

Whitmore Fire Safe Council: www.whitmorefiresafe.org/

Shingletown Fire Safe Council: Facebook

National Resource Conservation Service: www.nrcs.usda.gov/

United States Forest Service: www.fs.usda.gov/

Sierra Nevada Conservancy: www.sierranevada.ca.gov/

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