Fire Adapted Communities Background

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www.fireadapted.org

Fire Adapted Communities Background 2005 Quadrennial Fire Review promoted Fire Adapted Human Communities as solution to escalating suppression costs, structure losses, fatalities 2009 Quadrennial Fire Review further defined FAC concept for communities to take responsibility, action

Fire Adapted Communities Background 2009 Federal Land Assistance, Management, and Enhancement (FLAME) Act National Cohesive Wildland Fire Management Strategy 1) Create Resilient Landscapes 2) Create Fire Adapted Communities 3) Improve Response and Suppression

What is a Fire Adapted Community? A community taking responsibility and implementing actions at ALL scales to reduce its wildfire threat.

Fire Adapted Communities: Exist within or adjacent to a fire adapted ecosystem. Have adequate local fire suppression capacity to meet basic community protection needs. Have structures and landscaping designed, constructed, retrofitted, sited, and maintained to be ignition resistant.

Fire Adapted Communities, continued: Use local codes [Building, planning, zoning, and fire prevention codes] to require ignition-resistant home design, building materials, and siting. Ensure fuel treatments are properly spaced and sequenced, and are maintained across the landscape. Implement community wildland fire protection plans.

Why is a Fire Adapted Community important? Increases firefighter and public safety Increases community resilience & post-disaster economic recovery Decreases funds necessary to protect community Decreases dependence on suppression & response

How to Become a Fire Adapted Community Each community is unique and risk is best understood on the local level. These are general guidelines to consider in creating a fire adapted community: 1. Create a local collaborative group of stakeholders to develop and begin implementation of a CWPP. A CWPP identifies community risk and ways to mitigate that risk. 2. Use Firewise principles to help the community address structure ignitability issues and create defensible space. 3. Fire departments can use the Ready, Set, Go! program as an internal and external educational tool to make their jurisdiction aware of wildfire risk, keep awareness high, and help prepare for evacuation. 4. Work with local land managers to adequately treat hazardous fuels in and near the community. 5. Create fuel buffers around the community to protect it from wildfire encroachment. 6. Create internal safe zones in case evacuation is not possible. 7. Create or adopt wildland urban interface codes that govern where homes can be safely built, how they can be safely built, and of what materials.

Codes & ordinances Internal Safety Zones Forest Management fuel reduction Ready Set Go Exterior Fuel buffer Prevention Education Local capacity CWPP Firewise Fire Adapted Communities cooperative fire agreements

FAC & Firewise Communities Key program to becoming fire adapted Voluntary recognition program that targets neighborhoods and homeowners >30m

Fire Adapted Communities Resources Fire Adapted Communities Coalition Fire Adapted Communities Website Fire Adapted Communities Ad Campaign

Fire Adapted Communities Coalition USDA Forest Service US Department of the Interior US Fire Administration International Association of Fire Chiefs National Fire Protection Association Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety The Nature Conservancy National Volunteer Fire Council National Association of State Foresters National Wildfire Coordinating Working Group WUI Mitigation Committee

Fire Adapted Communities Website Promotes all forms of WUI mitigation Highlights national programs and research Ready, Set, Go! (IAFC) Firewise Communities/USA (NFPA) Community Wildfire Protection Plans (NASF) Wildfire Retrofit Guides (IBHS)

Fire Adapted Communities Website Reaches out to all audiences Homeowners & Residents Firefighters & Emergency Responders Land Managers & Foresters Civic & Community Leaders

Media Toolkit: Campaign Background Media Outreach Spread the Word View PSAs

Questions? Contact Information Molly Mowery Fire Adapted Communities Program Manager Wildland Fire Operations Division National Fire Protection Association mmowery@nfpa.org www.fireadapted.org