California Fast Tracks 300 Wildfire Projects in 300 Days
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 20, 2026
California Fast Tracks 300 Wildfire Projects in 300 Days
Progress Highlighted at Wildfire Task Force Regional Meeting
What you need to know: During the Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force’s Sierra Nevada Regional meeting, California announced it has fast-tracked over 300 critical fuels reduction projects across the state in just over 300 days— enabling a broad cross-section of communities, local fire safe councils, tribes, and organizations to move faster than ever before. Additionally, local partners showcased projects that are strengthening wildfire resilience in the Central Sierra and the Task Force previewed its 2026 Wildfire and Landscape Resilience Action Plan.
Jamestown, California – On March 19, Mountain Counties Water Resources Association and Sierra Nevada Conservancy hosted the California Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force’s Sierra Nevada Regional Meeting at the Chicken Ranch Casino Resort in Tuolumne County. During the meeting, the Task Force shared an update on California’s progress to streamline permitting for wildfire projects, which has enabled a wide range of agencies, tribes, and organizations to move faster than ever before to deliver real results. Three panels of local leaders provided examples of how partners in the Central Sierra are working across land ownerships, developing a robust workforce, and utilizing innovative funding strategies to bring wildfire projects to scale. Lastly, the Task Force provided updates on the development of its 2026 Wildfire and Landscape Resilience Action Plan.
“Across California, Task Force partners are proving that when we remove barriers and work together, wildfire resilience can happen faster and at the scale our communities and landscapes need,” said Task Force Director Patrick Wright. “From the Sierra Nevada and beyond, agencies, tribes, local leaders, and innovators are showing how collaboration, workforce development, and new funding approaches can turn momentum into real progress on-the-ground to protect communities and restore landscapes.”
CALIFORNIA FAST-TRACKS 300 PROJECTS ACROSS LAND OWNERSHIPS IN 300 DAYS
Following Governor Newsom’s emergency proclamation on wildfire, State agencies including the California Natural Resources Agency (CNRA) and California Environmental Protection Agency (CalEPA), have coordinated to cut red tape and fast-track critical wildfire safety projects across the state, all while maintaining vital environmental safeguards. Through this streamlined process, projects are now being approved in as little as 30 days, saving a year or more of review and red tape for more complicated projects.

Thanks to these efforts, over 300 projects across nearly 57,000 acres have been approved in all reaches of the state. This streamlining process has been a game changer for a wide range of state and federal agencies, tribes, resource conservation districts, firesafe councils, private landowners and more, to get critical work done faster. Fast-tracked projects are protecting vulnerable communities, improving defensible space, creating evacuation routes, and restoring ecosystems. We are already seeing a major impact on the ground with notable projects including:
- a collaborative 600+ acre fuels reduction project protecting communities in the Los Angeles area near the Palisades footprint led by the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority;
- the 450 acre Prosper Ridge Community Wildfire Resilience Project that is incorporating cultural burning and prescribed fire for community protection in Humboldt County;
- the nearly 3, 000-acre Scott Valley/Callahan Fuels Reduction Project to restore ecosystem health and protect vulnerable rural communities in Siskiyou County; and
- a project offering defensible space assistance for seniors and at-needs residents in Tuolumne County.
Thanks to the Governor’s extension of the emergency proclamation, project streamlining applications are being accepted through May 1, 2026. Visit the Task Force’s Project Streamlining webpage to learn more, view all approved projects and submit your application.
SHOWCASING LOCAL EFFORTS IN THE CENTRAL SIERRA

Unprecedented Collaboration Across Ownerships: The Sierra Nevada Regional Meeting highlighted how partners are coordinating work across federal, state, tribal, local, and private lands to achieve meaningful landscape-scale impact. A prime example showcased at the meeting is the Social and Ecological Resilience Across the Landscape (SERAL) project, a landmark collaboration that is restoring forest health and reducing wildfire risk across tens of thousands of acres by coordinating treatments across public and private lands—demonstrating how large-scale, science-based forest management can strengthen both ecological resilience and local economies. Another example of how the Central Sierra is overcoming challenges experienced in other parts of the state is the opening of Tuolumne BioEnergy, a new biomass facility in Sonora that will help convert forest waste from fuels reduction projects into renewable energy while supporting local forest management and reducing the amount of material left to burn in wildfires.
Building a Workforce to Implement Projects at Scale: Local leaders emphasized that scaling wildfire resilience work requires a skilled workforce. The Tuolumne Band of Me-Wuk’s Tuolumne Rancheria Fire Department shared how they are building tribal leadership in fuels reduction, cultural burning, and community protection. The wildfire technology company BurnBot shared how new technologies are helping accelerate work on-the-ground and how its equipment can help land managers conduct prescribed fire more efficiently and safely. Local businesses are also playing an important role in the Central Sierra. Companies such as Heartwood Biomass are creating jobs while supporting forest health by processing and utilizing material removed during fuels reduction projects. Together, these efforts are helping grow a stewardship workforce capable of implementing wildfire resilience work at the scale California needs.
Innovative Strategies to Fund Wildfire Resilience: Meeting panelists discussed how emerging approaches to financing wildfire mitigation are aligning economic incentives with risk reduction through innovative insurance and financing models that reward communities and property owners that invest in wildfire resilience. One example is RockRose Risk, which is working with communities to provide insurance discounts for homeowners who complete wildfire mitigation work. A pilot effort in Incline Village, Nevada demonstrates how investments in defensible space and home hardening can translate directly into lower insurance costs.
LOOKING AHEAD TO THE 2026 ACTION PLAN
The Task Force provided an overview on the development of the 2026 California Wildfire and Landscape Resilience Action Plan, previewing how the Plan will provide a statewide framework to align investments and guide regional and local planning and implementation, with a focus on the measures that reduce risk at scale and improve long-term resilience. The Plan will include two complementary strategies: one focusing on reducing wildfire impacts in and around communities and one focusing on improving landscape health to lower the likelihood and consequences of high-severity wildfire. A statewide framework for mobilizing regional action will support both strategies by aligning planning, permitting, implementation, reporting, and funding—ensuring priorities translate into coordinated work that reduces fire intensity near communities, strengthens preparedness, and enables more efficient projects and expanded use of beneficial fire.

Interagency Treatment Dashboard Shows Progress Toward Resilience

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 10, 2024
California Unveils First-of-Their-Kind Dashboards Mapping Out Fire-Prevention Work to Protect Communities
New tools created by CAL FIRE and Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force simplify data, boost transparency, and help inform wildfire planning and response – adding to the suite of tools the state has created

(South Lake Tahoe, CA) – The Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force and the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) unveiled several new tools today to help California track and communicate the state’s significant progress in improving wildfire and landscape resilience.
Key takeaways from the Task Force’s Sierra Nevada Regional Meeting in South Lake Tahoe include:
• Interagency Treatment Dashboard updated to show 2021, 2022 and 2023 data.
• Over one million acres of treatments were conducted on about 700,000 footprint acres in 2023.
• Prescribed fire treatments more than doubled between 2021 and 2023.
• CAL FIRE Fuel Treatment Effectiveness Dashboard is showing the impact of treatments impacted by recent wildfires.
“Thousands of wildfire resilience projects have been completed across California to protect our communities and landscapes from catastrophic wildfire in recent years, and more are underway,” said Wade Crowfoot, Secretary of the California Natural Resources Agency and co-chair of the Task Force. “Thanks to historic investments from our state and federal leaders, dozens of local agencies and hundreds of organizations are delivering these projects. Now for the first time, we have a dashboard that tracks all these diverse projects in one place and on one map. This enables us to measure our overall progress toward building wildfire resilience across the state and provides regional leaders valuable information to plan future projects.”
Interagency Treatment Dashboard
The updated version of the Interagency Treatment Dashboard shows wildfire resilience work (or “treatments”) for three calendar years (2021, 2022 and 2023). The data, which was sourced from federal, state, local, tribal, and private entities, is now available in a single hub that allows Californians to easily see where treatments (such as prescribed fire, mechanical thinning, and tree planting) have been completed. This information is used to inform firefighting efforts, ensure transparency to the public, and track progress toward statewide goals.
The Task Force released a Beta version of the Dashboard last year with 2022 data. This updated version now includes data for 2021, revised data for 2022, and new data for 2023.
Over 1 million acres worth of treatment work on 700,000 acres of land
The Dashboard shows significant progress on multiple fronts to bolster wildfire resilience in California. In 2023, more than one million acres of treatments were conducted on about 700,000 acres, with many acres receiving multiple treatments such as thinning, prescribed fire, or other practices to improve forest health and community resilience. The Task Force is tracking both “activity acres” – which reflect the level of effort conducted through various state, federal, and private programs – and “footprint acres” – which show the total geographic area treated in a calendar year.
The 2023 data shows a significant increase in acres treated since 2021. The increase is largely due to a significant expansion of prescribed fire treatments, which more than doubled since 2021. These efforts have put the state on a solid path toward meeting its joint commitment with the U.S. Forest Service to complete treatments on more than a million acres by the end of 2025.
The Task Force is committed to increasing the pace and scale of statewide actions to address California’s wildfire crisis. The Dashboard is part of a larger strategy to connect the various statewide entities committed to this monumental task.
Fuel Treatment Effectiveness Dashboard
CAL FIRE also launched a Fuel Treatment Effectiveness Dashboard, which shows how wildfire prevention projects are helping protect communities and landscapes when wildfire strikes. “Utilizing technology, we can now track in real time when wildfires hit areas where fuel treatments have been conducted. We can then go into an area and see how those treatments affected fire behavior, evacuation routes, firefighting efforts and more,” said CAL FIRE Chief/Director Joe Tyler. “This new dashboard is a tool for the public to see how fuels treatments had a positive impact on the firefight and how this work is making a difference.”
“No other state in the country is tackling wildfire resilience at this scale or with this level of innovation,” added U.S. Forest Service Deputy Regional Forester Kara Chadwick, who co-chaired today’s meeting. “From groundbreaking prescribed fire projects to comprehensive data tracking systems, we’re setting the standard for what it means to protect our landscapes and communities.”
The meeting is supplemented by field tours on October 8 and 11, to showcase wildfire resilience projects in the Tahoe Basin. Tour highlights include recovery efforts following the 2021 Caldor Fire, long-term prescribed burn projects in Sugar Pine Point State Park, meadow restoration at Máyala Wát undertaken by the Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California, and the first new industrial-scale sawmill built in Sierra Nevada in several decades.
“Today’s meeting is a major milestone in our efforts to better document and share our collective progress,” said Task Force Director Patrick Wright. “We will continue to build on our collective momentum to make California more resilient to wildfire.”
The next Task Force meeting will take place in Sacramento on December 13 and will provide a synthesis of the latest scientific findings that are informing California’s approach to address wildfire risks in a changing climate. These findings will be incorporated into the Task Force’s 2025 Action Plan Update.
Sky Biblin, Communications Coordinator
Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force
916-502-6527
California Launches Online Tool to Track Wildfire Resilience Projects



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 29, 2023
California Launches Online Tool to Track Wildfire Resilience Projects
New beta statewide tracking system brings local, state, and federal wildfire resiliency projects into one place to reflect significant progress.
(Sacramento, CA) – Today, the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force (Task Force) launched the beta version of a first-of-its-kind Interagency Treatment Dashboard that displays the size and location of state and federal forest and landscape resilience projects in California.
The dashboard offers a one-stop-shop to access data, provide transparency, and align the efforts of more than a dozen agencies to build resilient landscapes and communities in California. It reports treatment activities such as prescribed fire, targeted grazing, uneven-aged timber harvest, mechanical and hand fuels reduction, and tree planting. Users can sort treatments by region, county, land ownership and more.
“Thanks to historic funding from our Legislature and Governor Newsom, over 1,000 wildfire resilience projects are in motion across the state to protect communities and our diverse landscapes from catastrophic wildfire,” said California Secretary for Natural Resources Wade Crowfoot, co-chair of the Task Force. “Now we can track our progress like never before through this public Interagency Dashboard. It identifies where projects are happening, what kind of work is happening in a given location, and how much overall resilience work is being done. It’s one more step forward in building a comprehensive, durable approach to increasing our wildfire resilience in years to come.”
“This dashboard delivers a new tool for collaboration among agencies and communities,” said U.S. Forest Service Regional Forester Jennifer Eberlien, who co-chairs the Task Force with Secretary Crowfoot. “Having access to treatment information in this format will allow us to coordinate landscape scale activities aimed at restoring and enhancing ecosystem resilience.”
The dashboard compiles data from a broad range of organizations and government departments—many of which have different reporting requirements guiding how they capture information. While individual reporting tools and data will sometimes differ from this statewide snapshot, the dashboard brings these different reporting approaches together as a single and streamlined reporting tool. Key differences are addressed in the dashboard website FAQs .
“It takes everyone to create a more wildfire resilient California and this dashboard reflects the strides being made to get us there,” said CAL FIRE Director and Fire Chief Joe Tyler. “This dashboard shows how far we’ve come, the significant efforts underway, and our firm commitment to future work. As our many partners share data and outcomes to a central place, the mission of protecting communities and natural resources will remain the common thread driving our work. This new tool will also provide first responders a snapshot of where treatment has occurred to help inform fire suppression efforts.”
The dashboard is an important step to increase the pace and scale of statewide actions addressing California’s wildfire crisis and is a key deliverable of the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Action Plan , issued by the Task Force in January 2021.
The beta version of the dashboard will continue to be refined to include additional data, including projects by local and tribal entities, along with revisions based on public feedback. An official launch is expected in spring 2024 with more complete data on projects implemented in 2022.
Contact Information:
Sky Biblin, Communications Coordinator
Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force
916-502-6527
Albert Lundeen, Director of Media Relations
California Natural Resources Agency
albert.lundeen@resources.ca.gov
916-606-3990
D’Artanyan Ratley, Public Affairs Specialist
USDA Forest Service

