Recap of The Spring 2025 Regional Meeting in San Rafael

SPRING 2025 REGIONAL MEETING RECAP


March 27, 2025

A full-capacity audience of over 400 people came together in Marin County (with over 300 joining online) for the Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force’s Spring 2025 Regional Meeting. Hosted by Marin Wildfire Prevention Authority and Fire Safe Marin, the agenda and activities focused on critical issues related to community wildfire risk reduction and landscape management in Marin County and lessons from the Los Angeles fires.

If you couldn’t make it in person, or missed the real-time webinar, video recordings are available below.

SPRING REGIONAL MEETING AGENDA HIGHLIGHTS

  • Lessons from the Los Angeles Fires: Presenters highlighted key lessons from the 2025 LA wildfires relating to response, community safety, ecosystem resilience and home hardening.
  • Building Resilient Communities in Marin and Beyond: Regional leaders shared their progress and priorities for protecting communities since the 2017 North Bay wildfires.
  • Director’s Report: Director Wright presented the Task Force’s 2025 Key Deliverables outlining the highest priority actions underway this year to increase wildfire resilience across the state.
  • Emergency Proclamation on Wildfire Prevention Projects: Secretary Crowfoot discussed the Governor’s State of Emergency to expedite projects intended to protect California communities from catastrophic wildfire.
  • Tools for Improving Community Resilience: A panel of experts explored local and state-level initiatives that are defining data needs, driving down wildfire risk, and influencing access to affordable insurance.
  • Expanding Career Pathways in Fire & Forestry: Recent graduates of the FIRE Foundry program shared perspectives on priorities for employee-centered career and workforce development programs.

View Full Agenda

Welcome & Opening Remarks


• Wade Crowfoot, CA Natural Resources Agency

• Jennifer Eberlien, USDA Forest Service

• Task Force Executive Committee

• Lorelle Ross, Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria

• Damon Connolly, Assemblymember, District 12


Lessons Learned from the Los Angeles Fires


• Alexandra Syphard, Conservation Biology Institute

• Steve Hawks, Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety


Building Resilient Communities in Marin & Beyond


• Moderator: Jacy Hyde, CA Fire Safe Council

• Jason Weber, Marin County Fire

• Julie McMillan, Ross Town Council

• Mark Brown, Marin Wildfire Prevention Authority

• Claire Mooney, Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy


Director's Report: 2025 Key Deliverables


• Patrick Wright, Task Force


Emergency Proclamation on Wildfire Prevention Projects: Next Steps


• Wade Crowfoot, CA Natural Resources Agency


Tools for Improving Community Resilience


• Moderator: Chris Anthony, UCSD ProWESS Center

• Daniel Berlant, CAL FIRE

• Genevieve Biggs, Moore Foundation

• Jason Brooks, Fire Aside

• John Battles, UC Berkeley


Expanding Career Pathways in Fire & Forestry


• Moderator: Jason Weber, Marin County Fire

• Mimi Choudhury, FIRE Foundry

• Alfredo Campos, FIRE Foundry Graduate

• Meily Jimenez, FIRE Foundry Graduate

• Gabe Cruz, Chula Vista Fire Department


Closing Remarks


• Executive Committee



Planscape Adds Free Tool to Model Treatment Impacts

Planscape Adds Free Tool to Model the Impact of Wildfire Resilience Treatments


March 24, 2025 – The Planscape Partnership, a collaboration of public and non-profit organizations, announced the release of Planscape Treatment Effects, the latest update to the Planscape collaborative tool which adds a new suite of features that enables land managers and collaboratives to quickly and efficiently model and report out on landscape resilience treatments. Built in partnership with the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), Google.org, and the State of California, Planscape Treatment Effects allows land managers to run treatment scenarios, see 20-year projections of scenario outcomes, optimize resources, and share data instantly.

With Planscape Treatment Effects, land managers can:

  • Plan and compare management options by fuel treatment type, location, and sequence.
  • Understand the impact of treatments on outputs such as canopy cover, large tree biomass, and fire intensity in forests, as well as rate of spread and flame length in non-forested areas.
  • View outputs over the next 5, 10, 15, and 20 years.
  • Leverage the best science and models to run models directly in a web browser.


New Report On Effects of Forest Management on Carbon Storage

New Report on Effects of Forest Management on Carbon Storage in California


February 18, 2025 – American Forests, USFS, CAL FIRE, The Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science, and Michigan State University recently released a collaborative report on the effects of forest management and wood utilization on carbon sequestration and storage in California. The report provides comprehensive forest sector carbon modeling results, estimated treatment costs, wood product revenue, and wood processing capacity constraints for a broad range of forest management scenarios to help identify climate-smart forestry (CSF) practices. The modeling results provide information about forest climate mitigation and adaption opportunities that will be utilized to help inform the 2025 California Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force Action Plan

Notably, the report:

  • Identifies 11 million acres in California as having high or very high wildfire hazard potential.
  • Emphasizes the importance of wood utilization to improve carbon benefits.
  • Predicts that under a business-as-usual scenario, California could lose up to up to 48% of forest area & 50% of forest carbon by 2071.
  • Models scenarios that include a portfolio of actions that drastically reduce predicted losses to forest areas and forest carbon.

RESOURCES


Read the Report

Task Force Releases 2025 Key Deliverables

Task Force Releases 2025 Key Deliverables to Outline California’s Top Priorities Underway to Increase Wildfire Resilience


March 24, 2025 – The Task Force released its 2025 Key Deliverables, which include California’s top priorities and initiatives now underway to continue promoting wildfire and community resilience across the state.

The deliverables outline the highest priority actions underway this year to achieve the commitments in the 2021 Wildfire and Forest Resilience Action Plan and to advance key new initiatives that will be highlighted in the forthcoming update of the Action Plan to be released later this year.

The deliverables focus on actions that will improve home and community wildfire resilience, expand landscape-scale resilience programs, streamline regulatory processes, expand timber production and more.

Task Force Director Patrick Wright provided an overview of the 2025 Key Deliverables during the Director’s Report at the March 27 Spring Region Meeting. Click under Resources to the see the video.

Read The 2025 Key Deliverables (pdf)

USFS Partners with Sierra Pacific Industries to Reduce Wildfire Risk

USFS Initiates New Public-Private Partnership with Sierra Pacific Industries to Reduce Wildfire Risk


February 26, 2025 – The US Forest Service announced a $75 million Stewardship Agreement with Sierra Pacific Industries for the construction and maintenance of strategically placed fuel breaks on national forests in California and Oregon. This investment significantly expands upon efforts to create a network of fuel breaks across private and federal land to protect communities, reduce wildfire risk, and promote rural prosperity. The agreement will initiate the process to develop, construct and maintain shaded fuel break projects over a three-year period in California, adding about 400 miles to the existing 2,200-mile network of interconnected fuel breaks across private and federal land. Fuel break project locations were selected in partnership with the Forest Service and CAL FIRE to protect lives, property, critical water infrastructure, and the environment.


Recap of Virtual Briefing on Executing the Emergency Proclamation

Recap of Virtual Briefing on Fast-Tracking Wildfire Safety Projects and Expanding Beneficial Fire


On March 1, 2025 Governor Newsom proclaimed a state of emergency to expedite projects that will protect California communities from catastrophic wildfire. The proclamation includes:

  • Streamlining environmental regulations, including CEQA and the Coastal Act, as needed to expedite fuels reduction projects. Projects include vegetation and tree removal, adding fuel breaks, prescribed fire, and more.
  • Allowing non-state entities to conduct approved fuels reduction work with expedited and streamlined approval.
  • Directing state agencies to submit recommendations for increasing the pace and scale of prescribed fire.
  • Increasing the California Vegetation Treatment Program’s (CalVTP) efficiency and utilization in order to continue promoting rapid environmental review for large wildfire risk reduction treatments.

Questions on Project Streamlining Requests: FuelsReductionSOE@resources.ca.gov

Beneficial Fire Recommendations: BeneficialFireInput@resources.ca.gov


Sierra Nevada Conservancy Awards $2.3 Million to 40 Acre Conservation League Forest Health Project

Sierra Nevada Conservancy Awards $2.3 Million to 40 Acre Conservation League Forest Health Project


March 6, 2025 – The Sierra Nevada Conservancy (SNC) awarded a grant of $2.3 million to the 40 Acre Conservation League to complete forest health work on its 650-acre property just west of Emigrant Gap in Placer County. The grant will pay for fuels-reduction treatment on 189 acres, complementing 374 acres currently being treated under a grant from the Wildlife Conservation Board. The project will reduce overgrown stand density, reduce brush and ladder fuels, improve existing tree health and species structure, replant native species, and improve wildlife habitat. As the only Black-led land conservancy in California, the 40 Acre Conservation League has a dual mission of conserving and restoring natural lands and developing inclusive and welcoming access for recreational and educational opportunities in nature.


President Trump Orders Immediate Expansion of American Timber Production

President Trump Orders Immediate Expansion of American Timber Production


March 1, 2025 – President Trump signed an executive order which aims to boost domestic timber production. The order directs the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of Agriculture to:

  • Within 30 days, issue new or updated guidance regarding tools to increase timber production, reduce time to deliver timber, and decrease timber supply uncertainty;
  • Within 60 days, complete a strategy on USFS and BLM forest management projects to increase speed of approving forestry projects under section 7 of the Endangered Species Act (ESA);
  • Within 90 days, set a target for the annual amount of timber per year to be offered for sale over the next 4 years;
  • Within 120 days, complete the Whitebark Pine Rangewide Programmatic Consultation under section 7 of the ESA;
  • Within 180 days, consider adopting categorical exclusions administratively established by other agencies to comply with the National Environmental Policy Act for timber production, forest management, and wildfire risk reduction treatments; and
  • Within 280 days, consider establishing a new categorical exclusion for timber thinning and re-establish a categorical exclusion for timber salvage activities.

The order also directs all relevant agencies to eliminate all undue delays within their respective permitting processes related to timber production and use ESA regulations on consultations in emergencies to facilitate timber production. Lastly, the order directs the federal members of the Endangered Species Committee to submit a report that identifies obstacles to domestic timber production related to the ESA.

Additionally, on March 12, 2025, the U.S. EPA announced 31 actions aimed toward environmental deregulation, including reconsideration of exceptional events rulemaking to work with states to prioritize the allowance of prescribed fires within State and Tribal Implementation Plans.


California Signs Cultural Burning Agreement with Karuk Tribe

Brain van der Brug, Los Angeles Times

California Advances Wildfire Resilience and Honors Tribal Sovereignty Through Cultural Burning Agreement with the Karuk Tribe


March 7, 2025 – The Karuk Tribe and the California Natural Resources Agency (CNRA) have entered into a historic agreement as part of CNRA and CalEPA’s announcement that SB 310 is now in effect. This legislation and agreement acknowledges tribal sovereignty and addresses historical injustices while contributing to the mitigation of catastrophic wildfire by enabling CNRA and local air districts to enter into agreements with federally recognized California Native American tribes to support them in conducting cultural burns in their ancestral territories. For more information, read the FAQ on SB 310.

CNRA will be hosting a webinar about the landmark cultural burn agreement with the Karuk Tribe and SB 310 on April 1, 2025 at 1pm.


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