A new bill in the California Assembly aims to reduce wildfire risk by streamlining the state’s timber harvesting process.
Ward, a Democrat, represents California’s 78th District, which encompasses much of San Diego’s coastal region.
If the legislation is passed, timberland owners would be able to go through a single review system instead of the current process, which involves multiple agencies and departments—for example, CAL Fire, Fish and Wildlife, and regional water boards—each with its own rules and timelines.
Addressing Fire Risk
Ward is not the only California elected official looking to reduce fire risks. At a Feb. 25 San Diego County Board of Supervisors meeting, Supervisor Jim Desmond, a Republican representing District 5, plans to introduce a measure designed to prevent wildfires by requiring the clearing of homeless encampments during red flag warnings.“It just takes one fire and the wrong conditions in the wrong area, accidentally or deliberately started,” Brown said.
The state has a much smaller impact when it comes to management or mismanagement because it only owns three percent of California forest land, according to Dr. Joshua Fisher, associate professor of Environmental Science & Policy at Chapman University. The federal government owns 58 percent and the rest is mostly private industry.
Fisher said there are some things the state can do that can mitigate fire risks.
“Prescribed burns, thinning, buffers, treatments, and monitoring,” Fisher told The Epoch Times in an email.
He noted that sustainable timber management itself could be valuable for keeping more forests.
”If timber becomes no longer viable, land is often sold to developers who then deplete the remaining resources,” Fisher said. “So, from a standpoint of maintaining forests, sustainable timber management could be, ironically, quite useful for maintaining trees!”