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Tuesday, June 25, 2024
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Lake County Secures Over $16M to Combat Wildfire Risks

The following is a press release issued by the Mendocino National Forest:


Lake County has lost more than 1,800 homes to wildfire and some estimates indicate more than 60 percent of the county has burned between 2011 and 2021 [USDA Forest Service photo by Andrew Avitt]

Lake County communities with limited resources and facing high risk from wildfire are getting over $16 million in support from the USDA Forest Service’s Community Wildfire Defense Grants and Wood Innovations Program. These awards for communities like Lake County come at a time when wildfires are becoming more destructive across much of California.

“Lake County has been aggressively working to mitigate climate-related risks. Partnering with District Ranger Frank Aebly and local Forest Service staff have been an important facet of those efforts for many years,” said Jessica Pyska, Lake County’s District 5 Supervisor and Vice Chair of the Lake County Community Risk Reduction Authority. “We appreciate the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s recognition that hardening economically vulnerable communities is a matter of national priority.”

Last Tuesday, the Forest Service announced funded proposals for three Lake County projects under the Community Wildfire Defense Grants program:

  • Clear Lake Environmental Research Center: Awarded over $8 million to reduce fuels and restore fire-adapted ecosystems on private lands and roadways. This is a follow-up to their $9 million award in 2023, which is providing a blueprint for what a fire resilient community looks like.
  • Lake County Resource Conservation District with Tribal EcoRestoration Alliance: Awarded $7.3 million for its “Fire in Hand, Healing Lands” project to use a traditional ecological knowledge-based approach to fuels reduction, including Indigenous-lead restoration and beneficial burning. A key component is education and training through Lake County’s Training Exchange Program, also called TREX.
  • Seigler Springs Community Redevelopment Association: Received $249,00 to develop a new Community Wildfire Protection Plan to reduce wildfire risk and build resiliency in the Cobb Mountain area which is still recovering from the 2015 Valley Fire.

On Wednesday, additional awards were announced under the Wood Innovations Program grant. Wood innovations grants are meant to spark innovation, create new markets for wood products and renewable wood energy from sustainably sourced wood, and increase the capacity of wood processing facilities. Funded proposals include:

  • Scotts Valley Energy Corporation a wholly-owned corporation of the Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians: Received $409,000 award for a Central Wood Processing Campus and Wood-to-Energy Generation in Upper Lake, the gateway to the Southern portion of the Mendocino National Forest.

Local officials and funding recipients expressed excitement for the opportunities coming to Lake County.

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“I am ecstatic about the funding that has been awarded to Lake County to bolster the county for community wildfire and also wood innovations,” said Eddie Crandell, Lake County’s District 3 Supervisor covering Northshore communities and Lake Pillsbury.

“LCRCD (Lake County Resource Conservation District) is ecstatic to receive this investment and support our partners at TERA, and the community at large, to further integrate Traditional Ecological Knowledge into our collective efforts of land stewardship and wildfire mitigation,” said Harry Lyons, LCRCD Board President. “Beneficial burning is an essential tool to maintain resilient landscapes, and we are thrilled to re-establish this on our landscapes with TERA’s leadership.”

Both the Community Wildfire Defense Grant and the Wood Innovations Grant are made possible in part by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act. More information about the funded proposals, as well as announcements about the grant program, is available on the Community Wildfire Defense Grants website and the Community Wood Grants and a Wood Innovations Grants website.

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1 COMMENT

  1. Isn’t that just great? All this money given to a few well-connected individuals who will squander that money towards all their friends and cronies and the people of Lake County won’t get shit.
    I thought conservation of woodlands was a California thing? Now a few indians want to get into the lumber business after the state drove everyone else out.

    Where are the grants allocated for roads?

    The underpasses on the 29 near the Lakeport and the Nice-Lucerne cutoff have been in need of repair for many many years now.
    They renew the downtown Lakeport and put in a skate-park, ok great but what about all the rest of the roads in Lakeport?

    Sorry I get really pissed when I see money like this, free-money, everyone knows what agame the grant give out is.
    It costs us, it is money that could be used in a better way.

    I urge you to write the grantors ( the USDA Forest Service’s Community Wildfire Defense Grants and Wood Innovations Program.) to rescind these grants and spend money on better projects, not just some graft for grant writer and his pals.

    Write representative Mike Thompson as well. https://mikethompson.house.gov/

    Mike is a good egg.

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MendoFever Staff
MendoFever Staff
Editor's Note: Whenever an article's byline reads "MendoFever Staff", the contents of that article were not composed by any of our reporters. Types of writing that will be attributed to "MendoFever Staff" include press releases, letters to the editor, op-eds, obituaries— essentially writing that is not produced by a reporter.

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