Get Involved

 

Develop a Wildfire Action Plan

See Cal Fire’s Prepare page, SafeHome's Guide to Staying Safe During Wildfires, FEMA’s Defensible Space Guide, and San Francisco Chronicle’s Survival Guide.

  • Have up-to-date fire extinguishers inside the house and a long hose outside it

  • Know which valuables and papers to take with you and have them handy

  • Assemble an emergency supply kit

  • Check out alternative escape routes from your neighborhood

  • Designate an emergency meeting location for family members

 

Participate in a Community Organization that prepares for wildfire

Examples: Fire Safe Councils, NPLA Firewise, Yosemite Stanislaus Solutions, the Cultural Fire Management Council, Resource Conservation Districts, and the Mid-Klamath Watershed Council.

Private landowners and neighborhood organizations can create defensible space through vegetation management, including the clearing of flashy fuels, the use of fire-resistant ground cover, and having controlled burns with support from your local fire department.

Urban communities can adopt rural fire prevention measures like using fire-proof shingles and blocking open areas under eaves and decks.

Examine your local building codes in light of the increase in wildfires’ severity and geographical reach. Urban building codes aim at preventing fire from igniting and spreading within houses. In rural areas, people also protect their homes’ exteriors from wildfires, and they often do this both as individual homeowners and as community members.  

If your community has a Prescribed Fire Council  or a Fire Safe Council, join it. If it does not, speak with your neighbors about forming one. If you live in California, you can contact the California Fire Safe Council for guidelines and support. Make sure you are aware of Emergency Preparedness Resources.
 

Support Wildfire Wise Organizations and Public Policies

Advocate changes in public policy from local building codes to federal funding of proactive fire prevention through vegetation management and prescribed burns:

Contact your elected officials 

Support non-profit organizations that work for the health and safety of wildlands and watersheds:

Audubon Society

Central Sierra Environmental Resource Center

California Fire Safe Council

National Fire Protection Association

National Forest Foundation

National Parks Conservation Association

The Nature Conservancy

Resource Conservation Districts

The Sierra Club

Sierra Nevada Conservancy

The Pinchot Institute

The Sierra Fund

Sierra Forest Legacy

Terra Fuego

 

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wilder than wild

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