Monday, January 20, 2025

Mendocino Fire Safe Council gets a digital upgrade

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The following is a press release issued by Mendocino Fire Safe Council:


Smoke rises from a prescribed burn [Photograph from the Mendocino County Fire Safe Council]

The Mendocino County Fire Safe Council website has gotten a major renovation, thanks to Torrey Douglass, of Lemon Fresh Design in Boonville. As a professional editor and graphic designer, Torrey knows when to cut and how to organize. “The Fire Safe Council does an awful lot of stuff,” she observed, reflecting on the copious amounts of material that has found its way onto the vast online archive that is the organization’s internet presence. But, she conceded, “The website had become a little bloated and disorganized as more and more things were added on.” 

So she took an inventory of the material: what to keep, cut or update. One thing that became clear is that Fire Safe Council people have an appetite for science and policy that is not entirely universal. “A lot of the people involved are scientists or academics, and they use lots of words,” Torrey noted. “And then I come in with my machete, and I’m like, let’s use six instead of twenty.” It can make the difference between visitors deciding to avail themselves of a microgrant for a community project, or getting bogged down in the policy and scientific details that are only delicious to a small minority of people. “The words pack more punch when you use fewer of them,” she concluded. 

Torrey Douglass [Photograph from Mendocino County Fire Safe Council]

Like any defensible space project, clearing the overgrowth created visibility and eased navigation. The new website features three categories, right at the top: Get Ready. Get Help. Get Informed. Under the first category, visitors can select from a variety of resources to make their homes and neighborhoods as defensible as possible. They can learn how to become a Firewise community, or order a reflective sign so firefighters can find them in the dark. The Get Help tab offers information about free home assessments, financial assistance for defensible space, those microgrants, or community work parties, where the Fire Safe Council’s work crew will come out and help neighbors with fuel reduction efforts. Visitors who want to get informed can browse the county’s Community Wildfire Protection Plan, peruse the newsletter archive, or watch videos about home hardening.

Torrey has also implemented Search Engine Optimization (SEO), to make the site as user-friendly as possible. “People aren’t in a quiet library with an hour of free time and no other worries on their mind, absorbing your content,” she pointed out, invoking a typical user who may be trying to find information while cooking or soothing a child. 

The site also makes use of already existing information from government agencies. In the top right corner, users can link to CalFire to find out about current incidents, or AirNow, an air quality index from the Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S Forest Service. It’s all part of the effort to make crucial information more accessible.

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Torrey thinks the website and the newsletter are an ideal combination for people who want to stay up to date on how to adapt to wildfire. “This is a very active organization that is constantly looking for new ways to help make our county more fire safe,” she said. To stay informed about things like opportunities to get help with labor-intensive safety efforts, download maps, or what’s going on in a neighborhood near you, she advises, “Signing up for the newsletter would be a great way to stay in touch with what this organization is doing, because there’s always new stuff happening, and it can directly benefit the people who live here.”

For more information, please check out our new website at firesafemendocino.org.

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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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