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California Drought Could Mean Peak Fire Season Months Earlier Than Usual

Magalia Calif. based CalFire firefighter, Itto Akiyama, rests briefly after 48 hours of work at the Bear Fire near Oroville, Calif. Wednesday., Sept 9. 2020.
Andrew Nixon
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CapRadio
Magalia Calif. based CalFire firefighter, Itto Akiyama, rests briefly after 48 hours of work at the Bear Fire near Oroville, Calif. Wednesday., Sept 9. 2020.

Sissy Savoye’s tent is surrounded by charred trees and burn scars from last year’s massive North Complex Fire in Butte County.

She’s been living on her best friend’s property after his home burned to the ground.

They’re committed to rebuilding, but Savoye is nervous about this year’s wildfire season, as the state battles a severe drought.

“We’re not tapping water in our wells,” she said. “Usually that doesn’t happen until August.”

The last 18 months have been among the driest and hottest on record in California, leading Gov. Gavin Newsom to declare a drought emergency in over 40 counties. Moisture levels in fire fuels like grass and brush are below average across most of the state. Forests are filled with dead trees, which are prime for catching fire. And the meager snow pack has largely soaked into the ground instead of flowing into lakes and rivers.

Experts say this sets the stage for a dangerous wildfire season that could spark major fires weeks or months earlier than usual.

“Once there is an ignition event — whether it’s through a natural ignition event like dry lightning or whether it’s a human-caused ignition like a ember from a campfire — then that is much more likely to produce a large fire,” said Alex Hall, director of UCLA’s Center for Climate Science.

California wildfires have burned nearly five times as many acres on state land this year compared to the same time period last year. The state saw a record 4.3 million acres burn in 2020.

The growing threat of destructive wildfires has come to define daily life in towns across California, including Oroville.

Patrons at the Miner’s Ranch Saloon trade evacuation stories from the last few years. They muse over light beers about what this fire season could bring.

A crew of laborers order lunch at a taco stand next door. They're on a break from clearing trees, brush and other fire fuels from nearby homes."

And down the road on Lake Oroville, houseboats are being plucked out of the water due to the drought. The plummeting water level could cause the vessels to run aground and be wrecked. The lake is less than half its average capacity for this time of year, leaving dry, steep embankments looming over what water remains.

Eric Eastman’s houseboat was spared from Bidwell Marina’s lottery, which required the removal of about 70 boats. But he says it will have an impact on the whole houseboat community.

“Many of the owners potluck every night and get together,” he said. “We have friends’ boats that we [could] stay on, but it’s not like staying on your boat.”

Much of the grass around the lake is already yellowed and crispy — the perfect tinder for a devastating fire.

“[The] dryness of our fuels and our grasses are about a month-and-a-half to two months ahead of where they should be,” said Cal Fire Captain Robert Foxworthy.

He says the state is hiring over 1,200 new firefighters this year and bringing them on earlier than usual.

“Until they are actually out there fighting fire … they’re going to be doing fuel suppression projects,” he said.

That means thinning vegetation and cutting fuel breaks in fire-prone areas. Cal Fire also uses prescribed burns in its vegetation management planning.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and state lawmakers announced over half-a-billion dollars in early-budget spending to fund the new hires and support fuel suppression projects.

Newsom’s latest budget proposal, which he is negotiating with the Legislature, would devote $2 billion to addressing wildfires. It also proposes over $5 billion to address the drought.

Scott Rodd previously covered government and legal affairs for the Sacramento Business Journal. Prior to the Business Journal, Scott worked as a freelance reporter in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., contributing to the Washington Post, New York Times, Stateline, the New York Observer and Next City. Scott grew up in West Hartford, Connecticut, and studied English literature at Susquehanna University.
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