While it may never be preventable, under managed conditions wildfire destruction can be lessened. Small steps taken across our community can provide giant possibilities to protect our families, our homes, and our state. It starts with cattle, and ranchers at the helm — giving them the opportunity to unleash their superpowers.

CLIMATE CHANGE

Click in the sections below to see how climate change is contributing to the growing wildfire crisis and how drought, unhealthy forests and unmanaged fuels are all part of the problem.

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POOR MANAGEMENT

“The primary lesson is this: Because we are confronted with climate-driven dangers beyond our immediate control, coupled with decades of management that has left our forests and rangelands in an unnatural state, we must take urgent action to address those things we can control – forest health, the condition of our landscapes and the resiliency of communities in fire-prone areas.”

“Of the nearly 400,000 acres the resources agency says were treated in the last fiscal year, work by Cal Fire crews constituted only 55,000 acres — and just half of that was prescribed fire. Community grant projects, such as fuel break construction, represented another 35,000 acres.” 

“As the governor noted upon the approval of the first COVID-19 vaccines, ‘hope is on the horizon’ in turning back this pandemic. Unfortunately, there is no hope of immunizing California from the harm of catastrophic wildfires. The best medicine we have to minimize their harm is to improve the health of our landscapes. It must be an urgent priority.”

California forest destroyed by wildfire

THE CONSEQUENCES

Known for its beautiful climates, as the home of Hollywood, and for its colorful history including the gold rush, California is now becoming infamously known for the challenges of living with wildfires. Today, Californians are having to adjust to living with the realities that are present in the state due to extreme wildfires. Just weeks into 2021, residents of the Golden State were already facing power shutdowns sparked by dangerous weather conditions. Securing affordable insurance and fears looming of being dropped by insurance companies are ongoing. To top it off, new research is showing just how dangerous the smoke from these out of control wildfires is to the health of millions.

Explore this section below to take a further look at these consequences.

HEALTH THREATENED

“If we learned anything from the air-quality crisis that choked much of California a few months ago, it is that we need to be much more proactive about burning under conditions of our choosing, rather than to allow uncontrolled wildfires to burn largely on the hottest, driest and windiest days of the year.”

LIVES LOST

LIFESTYLES CHANGED

SOLUTIONS

“Two top academic natural resources experts believe it’s time for government and private enterprise to get serious about managing lands by eliminating barriers to additional prescribed burns and more grazing.”

MORE PRESCRIBED FIRES

“There’s only one solution, the one we know yet still avoid. ‘We need to get good fire on the ground and whittle down some of that fuel load.’”

Read They Know How to Prevent Megafires. Why Won’t Anybody Listen? from ProPublica to learn more about how increased use of prescribed fires could alleviate the crisis in California.

“Desperate for a solution, states are finding that lighting a fire can be a good way of preventing one.

“A growing army of experts argues that ‘prescribed fire’ — planned, deliberate burns — can reduce the volume of combustible vegetation from parched landscapes and ease a crisis gripping the western third of the country.”

Prescribing fire

INCREASED GRAZING

Research studies have proven livestock grazing has the power to mitigate impacts of wildfires through reducing fire spread and intensity by minimizing fuel loads and increasing fuel moisture. One cow can consume approximately 27 pounds of forage per day, about 5 tons per year—5 tons which instead could be fuel for California’s next catastrophic wildfire.

With direct emissions from beef cattle equating to only 2% of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, grazing can allow for a more resilient California.

What else is being said about prescribed fires & grazing?
For over a century, firefighting agencies have focused on extinguishing fires whenever they occur. That strategy has often proved counterproductive. Many landscapes evolved to burn periodically, and when fires are suppressed, vegetation builds up thickly in forests. So when fires do break out, they tend to be far more severe and destructive.
"Better managing our public lands means reducing the fuels that stoke wildfires. One way to accomplish that is to manage the land more actively by increasing the acreage that can be leased for grazing."

CALL TO ACTION

These solutions are steps towards building a more fire resilient California, but it is going to take all of us to create these changes. Start by using your voice now.

STEPS YOU CAN TAKE TO BE PART OF THE SOLUTION:

1. Share one or more of the posts from our social media platforms below.

2. Email the link to this site or an article from this page to a friend or key opinion leader.

3. Follow us on social media to keep up with our mission to see steps towards increasing land management in the state now to secure a resilient future for all Californians.

STEPS YOU CAN TAKE TO BE PART OF THE SOLUTION:

1. Share one or more of the posts from our social media platforms below.

2. Email the link to this site or an article from this page to a friend or key opinion leader.

3. Follow us on social media to keep up with our mission to see steps towards increasing land management in the state now to secure a resilient future for all Californians.

California forest after wildfire