May 19, 2023
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter May 19, 2023News in West CountyCamp Meeker Volunteer Fire Dept. Annexation Into Gold Ridge Fire District, May 20Camp Meeker Volunteer Fire Dept. Annual Pancake Breakfast, May 28Corrected Free Chipper Request Link Camp Meeker Volunteer Fire Dept. Annexation Into Gold Ridge Fire District We hope you can join us (Camp Meeker Fire Dept.) along with Gold Ridge Fire Protection District Chief Shepley, on Saturday, May 20, 2023 at 3pm, to discuss annexation of the Camp Meeker Fire Dept. into the Gold Ridge Fire District. Camp Meeker Volunteer Fire Dept. Annual Pancake Breakfast Camp Meeker Volunteer Fire Dept. Annual Pancake Breakfast will be Sunday, May 28th from 8-12, at the Camp Meeker Fire House. Corrected Free Chipper Request Link In our last newsletter the FREE chipping link was bad; here it is corrected: Monte Rio and Occidental Fire crews have begun chipping in their local neighborhoods, helping the community remove downed debris from winter storms and removing fuel before fire season. The chippers were provided by a recent Safer West County awarded CalFire grant that will help communities of Occidental, Camp Meeker, Monte Rio and Forestville make greater progress at fire mitigation efforts. To apply for FREE chipping in one of these communities, go to https://saferwestcounty.org/grants/ If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
Safer West County Fire Safe Communities BODEGA/BODEGA BAY CAMP MEEKER FREESTONE FORESTVILLE AREAS OF HOLLYDALE/CANYON/TERRACES, CHAMPS, AND HACIENDA GRATON/GREEN VALLEY GUERNEVILLE MONTE RIO OCCIDENTAL POCKET CANYON RIO NIDO WEST SEBASTOPOL |
May 13, 2023
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter May, 2023News in West CountyChipping Starts in Monte Rio and OccidentalFire & Emergency PreparednessA Note on Road Conditions in West CountyHelp Us Help You: Generator Maintenance & RepairsChanges To Regulations For Vacation Rentals And Rules For TimesharesWatch Duty Now Available in Western StatesForestville Farmers Market start June 6th, 4-7pmRio Fest takes place at the Monte Rio Amphitheater from 1-6 on June 17Wildfire season is around the corner. Have you reduced your risk? Chipping Starts in Monte Rio and Occidental Monte Rio and Occidental Fire crews have begun chipping in their local neighborhoods, helping the community remove downed debris from winter storms and removing fuel before fire season. The chippers were provided by a recent Safer West County awarded CalFire grant that will help communities of Occidental, Camp Meeker, Monte Rio and Forestville make greater progress at fire mitigation efforts. To apply for FREE chipping in one of these communities, go to https://saferwestcounty.org/grants/ ___________ Here are some photos from the Occidental Fire Department: ![]() ![]() The Monte Rio Fire department has also been very actively chipping in their district, working on over 12 different sites in the past 3 weeks. Pictured: chipping in action at community cleanup in Villa Grande on April 22. Photo credit to John Behrens ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Elizabeth summary of the changes that affect fire/emergency preparedness and a link to the full story A Note on Road Conditions in West County As most of you have experienced, our roads really took a beating from this past winter’s storms and it can feel like the County is not responsive to fixing the problems. One of our local community members asked the County about it and got a very thoughtful and detailed email from Elise in Lynda Hopkin’s office. We have copied it below, so everyone can better understand both the situation and how you can get the best results for telling the county about problems in your area. From Amy Beiharz. __________________Thanks for your patience on these good questions. I know that sometimes road decisions don’t look like they make sense – but the way funding works drives a lot of our decision-making. I’ll give you some background on that and also assure you that we are well aware of the issues on Joy Road and working on them. Our roads in West County are suffering from a systemic level of underfunding which we are catching up on. First, when Lynda came into office the roads budget was split evenly between the 5 Sonoma County Districts – despite the fact that West County has 40% of the roads! So while tiny District 3 has pristine roads, ours have been going to heck for decades. Lynda uncovered this inequity and managed to change this in the County budgeting so that the budget is now tied to road miles. In addition, state road funding is tied to the number of car registrations, so all those miles of roads we have going through state and county parks without people are not adequately funded. All this said, in the past few years we have consistently been making historic investments in our roads and slowly but surely catching up. This year we had over $55 million in needed re-paving projects and a $15 million budget. Our process was to gather all the roads with re-paving needs and pass them through the following for prioritization: Fire and emergency services (Safer West County is all over Occidental Roads!) , Roads engineers, and our team who drove every road personally. There were no easy decisions. Joy Road will be re-paved each year in sections, as are most of the roads, allowing us to address the widest number of priority areas. The slide on Joy Road needs much more than re-paving and it has been accepted as a FEMA funded project. The storm disasters we’ve had in the past few years have far exceeded County funds (2019 was $86 million in damage and I don’t know this year’s yet). In the first 3 months of this year roads received more than 2,000 important roads repair requests – more than are usually received in a full year. These storms the past few years have really hit us hard. The good thing about being a FEMA project is the funding. The bad thing is that they have a lengthy process. So our roads engineers have stabilized the slip out site and it will remain monitored in this condition until that process is complete and FEMA provides the ok and funding to move ahead. We have provided this information to Safer West County / Amy Beilharz, with whom we are in regular contact. We also work with this organization on vegetation management projects. I’m going to copy Amy here so that you two can connect. In general, the best way to get fastest ongoing maintenance requests on anything to do with roads such as vegetation, pot holes, debris, use SocoConnect. These requests get immediately to the teams working on them, they provide you with a case number so you can track progress, and take care of a lot of the ongoing issues. Best regards, Elise Elise Weiland Field Representative Supervisor Hopkins Help Us Help You: Generator Maintenance & Repairs Safer West County knows how difficult it can sometimes be to find a contractor to help you improve your home and property’s fire resiliency and your emergency preparedness. To that end, we are compiling a resource section of our Safer West County website that will bring you both information on key topics and also a list of potential contractors and technicians in our area. Keep in mind, this will not be a vetted list with SWC’s seal of approval but just a compilation of options for you to call and determine who is the right fit for you. Today, we are seeking information on good generator maintenance and service mechanics. We are compiling a list of such service people/businesses for inclusion in the “Resources” section on Safer West County’s website. We are seeking contact information for people or businesses who service either portable or standby (aka “stationary”) generators. During the past several years there has been a huge increase in generator sales in Sonoma County, but there is apparently a paucity of people who service them or who can perform the required annual maintenance on standby generators. Generators must be properly maintained to assure reliability. Neglecting the required maintenance or service intervals may also create a hazardous situation and potentially even cause a fire. Please email the name and contact information on any and all generator mechanics, electricians, or businesses you can recommend to carlwahl3@gmail.com. Your information will be reviewed by SWC’s Wildfire Protection and Emergency Preparedness (WP/EP) Committee prior to posting. Changes To Regulations For Vacation Rentals And Rules For Timeshares The Board of Supervisors has made changes to the regulations for vacation rentals and rules for timeshares in the county that include additional fire safety and evacuation measures. The safety of visitors in vacation rentals was listed as a project in both the Fire Safe Occidental and Fire Safe Camp Meeker CWPPs and the supervisors actions directly addresses some of the major concerns. The changes include standards that:Limit vacation rental occupancy based on number of bedrooms or septic capacity, with a maximum occupancy of 12 guests regardless of the size of the homeEstablish standards for parking areas and limit use of on-street parking to a single spaceEstablish limits for noise and lightRequire a written evacuation plan and require evacuation whenever a warning is issuedRequire complaints to be resolved within 30 minutes in the evening and within one hour during the dayRequire vacation rental properties to meet requirements for defensible spaceProhibit outdoor burning of solid fuelRequire notifying neighbors when the annual Vacation Rental License is renewedLimit licenses to one per person and limits ownership to natural persons or family trusts – no LLC or corporate ownership For more information go to: https://permitsonoma.org/boardofsupervisorsvotestochangevacationrentalregulationsandrulesfortimeshares For those in the community that may be vacation rental owners Fire Safe Occidental created a draft evacuation plan for modification by owners. (Add link to the document Linda Cerini developed) ![]() Opening Day at the Forestville Farmers Market is Tuesday, June 6th (4 ~ 7pm) with the market open through Sept. 26th. Once again we will be setting up a Safer West County/Fire Safe Forestville booth to give away weather radios and information on how to prepare your family and home for emergencies, as well as encouraging people to form neighborhood groups. Information on the market is here. So far, the best example of a successful neighborhood group in Forestville is actually three in one: Hollydale-Hacienda-Terraces. This spring they did a major neighborhood vegetation clean-up with a chipper grinding up piles into landscaping chip. Now that Forestville Fire has a chipper through the SWC grant, we encourage more neighborhood groups to do the same. Please visit: https://saferwestcounty.org/grants/ to learn about scheduling the chipper for your neighborhood. The machine is operated by firefighters so getting on their schedule is essential, so please work through SWC to arrange for the chipper – QUESTIONS? Email: Chippers@SaferWestCounty.org IF SWC gets the grant for vegetation management along evacuation routes, Vesta Copestakes has agreed to contact property owners along River Road from Steelhead Beach to the intersection of Mirabel Road. So far riverside property owners enthusiastically support this program since this stretch of road is heavily used all summer with far too many cigarette butts thrown into leaf and needle debris that has collects between the fog line and the pavement edge. Beachgoers walk this route from the Park ‘n Ride to the park all summer long increasing both fire risk as well as the potential for accidents. If anyone is interested in forming a neighborhood group in Forestville, please contact Vesta at 707-887-0253 – vesta@sonic.net and/or come to the booth at the Forestville Farmers Market. Share time with your neighbors and shop for organic, farm fresh food as well as a chance to dine out among the oaks in Forestville’s Downtown Oaks Park. You can’t miss it! We look forward to seeing you there. The 3rd annual Rio Fest takes place at the Monte Rio Amphitheater from 1-6 on June 17 This free event features live music, food trucks, and local artisans. Representatives from Safer West County, Watch Duty and the West County GMRS radio project will be sharing a booth. Stop by and learn about the importance of GMRS radios in emergencies! Also, the Monte Rio Fire Department Chipper will be on display – if you live in Monte Rio and have chipping needs, fill out this form and we will get you on this list! Wildfire season is around the corner. Have you reduced your risk? ![]() Our home hardening contractors will identify the highest risks to your home and provide you with a personalized list of recommendations to “harden” your home against ember ignition and other wildfire exposures. The assessment is not part of a code-compliance program and there is no obligation to complete the recommendations. How to Schedule: 1. Go to permitsonoma.org/WildfireAdaptedMapViewer. 2. Enter your address or Assessor Parcel Number (APN). 3. Pick your preferred time for a 15-minute phone consultation. 4. County contractor Madronus Wildfire Defense will call you to schedule your assessment. For more questions about the Wildfire Adapted program, contact us at WildfireAdapted@sonoma-county.org or visit the program webpage. Thank you, Permit Sonoma Fire Prevention If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAYSafer West County Fire Safe Communities BODEGA/BODEGA BAY CAMP MEEKER FREESTONE FORESTVILLE AREAS OF HOLLYDALE/CANYON/TERRACES, CHAMPS, AND HACIENDA GRATON/GREEN VALLEY GUERNEVILLE MONTE RIO OCCIDENTAL POCKET CANYON RIO NIDO WEST SEBASTOPOLSee our most recent Newsletters hereStay safe and keep in touch. Safer West County is always looking for people who can get involved, or ideas you may have about how we can best serve our community. Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2023 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
April 25, 2023
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter April, 2023Upcoming Events in West CountyCharlotte’s Web biochar demo and bioswale water retention – Sat April 29 from 10a-2p in west SebastopolForestville Fix-It Day & Info Fair – Sat April 29 from 10-2:00 pm at the El Molina LibraryBetter Together: Excellence in Neighborhood Preparedness Leadership – Saturday, July 22, 2023Wildfire season is around the corner. Have you reduced your risk? Charlotte’s Web Demo Day Water in the Landscape & Biochar New date: Sat April 29 from 10a-2p ![]() Sat April 29 from 10-2:00 pm at the El Molina Library Safer West County and Watchduty will be there! Get more information here Better Together: Excellence in Neighborhood Preparedness Leadership Saturday, July 22, 2023 This event has been designed to help leaders with developing engagement and strong participation in their neighborhood groups. We have been listening to what you asked for, and will deliver with world class speakers who can help you create the team you have been working so diligently toward. Great ideas from experts, and peers, all rolled into a fun, fast paced single day symposium. The event will be held on Saturday July 22, 2023 at the Cambria Hotel Sonoma Wine County in Rohnert Park. Agenda is being finalized but will include tools to help you create engagement, enthusiasm, and participation in preparedness in your community. This will also be an opportunity to meet leaders in neighborhood preparedness from across the county, to work toward the development a truly resilient local preparedness effort. Morning session includes: Do you need to convince your neighbors to engage, participate, and commit?Cayly Dixon, Dale Carnegie Institute: Present to Persuade Learn the proven structure for persuasion+ Plus details on a new program from Department of Emergency Management to bring needed resources to your neighborhood Afternoon Session includes: Do you know how to get people to come to your meetings again and again?How to design experiences that people won’t want to miss (and will talk about long after).Presented by Heather Learner, Development Executive. Boy Scouts of America, facilitated by Taylor Ray, Studio B Creative+ Plus an opportunity to brainstorm with other leaders to learn best practices in neighborhood preparedness. The event includes continental breakfast, lunch, afternoon snack and a no-host bar for happy hour. Also look forward to a thank you gift in appreciation for all the amazing work you have done in creating Sonoma Strong Together. This is all at no charge for neighborhood leaders. Space is limited so please register today to be sure you get a spot at this important event. If for some reason you can’t make it once you registered please let me know so I can free up the space. Register here https://www.eventbrite.com/e/better-together-excellence-in-neighborhood-preparedness-leadership-tickets-609955913557 and stay tuned for more details! We appreciate your partnership,… All the Best, Nancy Brown, PhD Community Preparedness Program Manager County of Sonoma – Department of Emergency Management 2300 County Center Drive, Suite B220 Santa Rosa, CA 95403 Office:(707) 565-3528| Mobile:(707) 396-4033. | Fax:(707) 565-1172 www.SoCoEmergency.org Wildfire season is around the corner. Have you reduced your risk? ![]() Our home hardening contractors will identify the highest risks to your home and provide you with a personalized list of recommendations to “harden” your home against ember ignition and other wildfire exposures. The assessment is not part of a code-compliance program and there is no obligation to complete the recommendations. How to Schedule: 1. Go to permitsonoma.org/WildfireAdaptedMapViewer. 2. Enter your address or Assessor Parcel Number (APN). 3. Pick your preferred time for a 15-minute phone consultation. 4. County contractor Madronus Wildfire Defense will call you to schedule your assessment. For more questions about the Wildfire Adapted program, contact us at WildfireAdapted@sonoma-county.org or visit the program webpage. Thank you, Permit Sonoma Fire Prevention If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2023 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
March 29, 2023
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter Late March, 2023Upcoming Event in West CountyGraton Area Disaster Preparedness Fair – Saturday, April 1, 2023, 10 AM – 2 PMAnnual Fool’s Parade and Party – Saturday, April 1, 2023 1-4 PMForestville Town Hall – April 20, 2023Graton Area Disaster Preparedness Fair Saturday, April 1, 2023, 10 AM – 2 PM ![]() Saturday, April 1, 2023 1-4 PM Join the village of Occidental as we celebrate all things foolish at this annual event where fools reign supreme! Frolic with the locals as they parade foolishly through town, full of West County whimsy, led by The Hub Bub Club marching band, as we wind our silly way to Occidental Center for the Arts for extreme frivolity and fun! Everyone is welcome to join the all-ages parade. Gather with us at the Occidental Community Center at 12:45 pm to participate. We’ll wind our way through town and then head to the after party at OCA! The parade begins at 1 PM and lasts approximately 30 minutes. See more info here! ![]() April 20, 2023 April 20 – Forestville Town Hall – Doors Open at 5pm – event starts at 5:30. Location: Forestville Elementary School – Multi-Purpose Gymnasium, 6321 Hwy116, Forestville. Take Travis Road to the parking lot at the back of the school by the gym. Safer West County/Fire Safe Forestville will have a table with information about becoming Fire Wise Communities and the new FREE chipper program. There will be opportunities to socialize and learn from a variety of information tables at this event both before and after the Town Hall. PRESENTATIONS: Permit Sonoma on the General Plan Housing Element for affordable/workforce housing in Forestville, AND Public Infrastructure plans for downtown sidewalk and crosswalk improvements – as well as the roundabout plans for the intersection of River Road at Mirabel Road with Q & A for each topic. This Town hall is hosted by the Lower Russian River Municipal Advisory Council and the Forestville Planning Association. INFO: 95436.org If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2023 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. |
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter March, 2023Contents for this NewsletterOAEC – Using fuels reduction to increase water retention and landscape health. You can too!Don’t miss your FREE assessment and up to $10k of rebates Fire Safe Occidental residents on Joy and Willow Creek roads!GMRS saves the day in Cazadero (A true community success your area might want to pursue!)Annual Fool’s Parade and Party Saturday, April 1, 2023 1-4 PMSmokey the Bear Bingo A Benefit for FireSafe GuernevilleDo you have marketing skills? Safer West County has a paid position for a communications specialist!“Intersection of Fire and Flood” OAEC’s Brock Dolman was featured on NBC News As we thin and limb our forests and landscapes towards fire fuels reduction, let us remember that as Brock says, “Slash ain’t trash – it’s beneficial biomass!” We can put that material to good use to decrease erosion, build soil, increase water holding capacity, and create habitat for critters. Check out this great clip from NBC news about OAEC’s 80-acre wildlands management. ![]() FREE wildfire risk assessment & $10k rebates!Fire Safe Occidental neighbors along Joy Rd and Willow Creek Rd are eligible for a FREE wildfire risk assessment provided by Madronus Wildfire Defense and up to $10,700 in rebates for home hardening and get defensible space all paid for SoCo Adapts. The assessment is not part of a code-compliance program and there is no obligation to complete any of the recommendations identified. There are a limited number of these assessments available.SIGN UP TODAY General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) in Cazadero Mike NichollsDuring and following the Walbridge Fire in 2020. Cazadero had no 911 service for days – our telephone landline provider, Frontier Communications experienced a central office back-up battery failure, Comcast/Xfinity failed once their battery back-up system discharged, and like many West County areas, there is no reliable cell service within the isolated community of Cazadero. Another system was needed for backup. Luckily, Tony Goodwin had established a small successful neighborhood GMRS network on East Austin Creek Rd in 2019 following the Pythian/Nunns fires in Eastern Sonoma County and was willing to help us create a similar system in Caz. We received generous funding from the Cazadero Community Club and the Cazadero Firefighters Association plus contributions from local individuals and homeowner associations. The $4,500 raised purchased repeaters and established a revolving fund for the purchase, programming, and sale (at cost) of relatively inexpensive hand-held “handy talkie” radios with improved antennas. The Wildwood and Mohrhardt repeaters were placed into service by June 2021. With the support of Johannes Hoevertsz, the county director of TPW/Sonoma Public Infrastructure and Supervisor Hopkins, PG&E settlement and TIF grants funded additional hardened repeater sites throughout the county and repeater upgrades to provide improved coverage. We have spent a year and a half hosting training sessions and encouraging those that had purchased radios to join a weekly CazNet (communications networking meeting), in order to gain experience in radio use and protocol. On January 5, 2023, our work really paid off. With the severity of weather, localized flooding, and power outages, our ‘CazNet’ was called into immediate action. • We scheduled nets four times daily at set times, hosting general information check-in’s, specific wellness checks, 911 inquiries, PG&E progress regarding the restoration of power, and the ever-vital stream, and creek height reports keeping our neighborhoods informed. • Several of the key CazNet management team monitored the Cazadero repeater frequencies 24/7 to handle and dispatch emergency calls. • Two of the members had Starlink data connections and were able to update our CazNet meeting information on a ‘just in time’ basis. • One ‘net’ member reported a non-ambulatory patient and his family had no water, light and heat as their generator had failed. Within 8 hours, volunteers had donated a temporary generator, restored power to their well, had their forced air heater system up and their refrigerator and freezer back in service. • Other success stories included communicating with Comcast’s Governmental Affairs Manager once broadband service had been restored to our local firehouse. • We were able to communicate PG&E’s progress regarding pole replacements in order for Comcast to begin re-hanging cable and replacing damaged drops to specific addresses for residential service restoration and prioritize broadband reconnection for home operated businesses and remote workers. • One final benefit of the GMRS communications network is that five of the members have also earned FCC HAM radio licenses, and two members of the management team are now certified as Auxiliary Communications Service radio operators from the Sonoma County Department of Emergency Management. This added benefit allows for GMRS issues to be escalated by ACS HAM operators directly to the county via the Department of Emergency Management. What truly is amazing is the nimbleness of the Cazadero GMRS group – from the date of deciding to move forward in March 2021 we achieved operational status with two repeaters serving our community in less than 90 days. This truly is a success story which can easily be duplicated elsewhere! If you want help setting up your community, reach us at info@saferwestcounty.org Community NewsSafer West County is dedicated to helping activate communities across Western Sonoma County. We believe connected communities are safer communities. In that light, we invite all West County Fire Safe or Emergency Preparedness groups to post news, events, and other information to your community here. We will enjoy helping you spread the word about who your are, what you do, and how people can get involved. Annual Fool’s Parade and Party Saturday, April 1, 2023 1-4 PM Join the village of Occidental as we celebrate all things foolish at this annual event where fools reign supreme! Frolic with the locals as they parade foolishly through town, full of West County whimsy, led by The Hub Bub Club marching band, as we wind our silly way to Occidental Center for the Arts for extreme frivolity and fun! Everyone is welcome to join the all-ages parade. Gather with us at the Occidental Community Center at 12:45 pm to participate. We’ll wind our way through town and then head to the after party at OCA! The parade begins at 1 PM and lasts approximately 30 minutes. See more info here! ![]() Occidental Fire department has imported more sand and bags in case your home is susceptible to flooding. Help yourself and share with others. Smokey the Bear BingoA Benefit for FireSafe Guerneville Tickets Here ![]() Safer West County is seeking a Communications Specialist who can help us manage the various outreach for our recently awarded CalFire grant. The position will work closely with our past President to create a communications plan and calendar, draft press releases, update web pages, create promotional materials, and create social media posts throughout the 3-year grant cycle. This is a part-time paid position. To inquire about this position please send us information about your interest and experience at: info@saferwestcounty.org If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2023 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
February 25, 2023
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter February, 2023Contents for this NewsletterSWC receives a $1.1M grant to help reduce fire risk in West CountyWildland Fire Assessment Program with Habitat for Humanity is live!Things Happening in Your CommunitiesWe have another Fire Wise Neighborhood – is yours ready?Learn about water catchment systemsOur loved Roberta MacIntyre wins well deserved Harry Quinlan awardSafer West County is seeking a Communications SpecialistWe were awarded $1.1M to help West County residents reduce wildfire risk We are excited to announce that CalFire awarded Safer West County and Fire Safe Sonoma $1.1M to help residents in Forestville, Monte Rio, Camp Meeker, and Occidental reduce their home fire risk—both with stipends to help pay for defensible space work, chippers to provide free chipping in your community, and education to help homeowners understand priorities and how to achieve defensible space. This will not only protect homes from wildfire but also make our surrounding communities safer in the process. If you live outside of the Forestville, Monte Rio, Camp Meeker, or Occidental communities, know that Safer West County will continue to apply for and receive other grants to increase our joint efforts at decreasing the risk of fire in West County. If you are wondering if your home is considered part of this project’s boundaries, stay tuned as we develop our website landing page for the grant with maps and many other details of the project. While the details of the homeowner incentive and chipper program are still being finalized, four chippers arrive in March at the firehouses in Camp Meeker, Occidental, Monte Rio, and Forestville. Homeowners in each community will soon be able to apply for free chipping and the incentive programs at SaferWestCounty.org. We are excited to partner with the Fire Chiefs and their crews in this initiative. Their support makes this program possible. The help of community members from Forestville, Monte Rio, Camp Meeker, and Occidental is also needed to coordinate the programs in each area so that homeowners can have access to these programs. There are lots of ways, big and small, to contribute. You could help coordinate with the fire department, take before and after photos, update mailing lists, post signage… . All volunteer hours will be logged to provide community match for this grant. If you are able to help in any way, please reach out and let us know. Email info@saferwestcounty.orgwith your contact info. Stay tuned. Much more information coming soon!Wildland Fire Assessment Program with Habitat for Humanity is now live!For a limited time, you can get your home assessed for its wildfire risk and receive expert recommendations from the FireSAFE Sonoma WFAP team. Then you can get those home hardening and defensible space recommendations worked on from Habitat for Humanity. Both of this can be done for free! FireSAFE Sonoma has teamed up two organizations and programs to provide the full service that many Sonoma County residents are looking for – an assessment followed up by much needed improvements! Not only that, but the Fire Safe Sonoma Listos Tool Trailer will play a key role in this too. It has brand new tools and equipment that are ready to be put to work. All you need to do to start is see if you qualify by filling out our application below. It should only take a few minutes. We have matched up our requirements to provide this service for those in the most need, seniors and low income folks who do not have the time and/or resources to do some of this work. We are excited to receive your application and make a more Fire Safe Sonoma, one house at a time! If you have any questions about anything, please feel free to email firesafesonomastaff@gmail.com. Learn more about our WFAP program HERE! Fill out this short WAFP application HERE! Community NewsSafer West County is dedicated to helping activate communities across Western Sonoma County. We believe connected communities are safer communities. In that light, we invite all West County Fire Safe or Emergency Preparedness groups to post news, events, and other information to your community here. We will enjoy helping you spread the word about who your are, what you do, and how people can get involved. Fire Safe Occidental We have another Firewise Neighborhood – is yours ready?FSO Neighborhood #1 was recently approved as a Firewise USA® Community (that’s Harrison Grade Road and Place, Facendini, a bit of Morelli and Heather Lane, 100 parcels in all). Our hope is that the designation will help to protect to some degree our insurance policies from cancelation, and maybe even provide discounts with some companies. If anybody wants to talk about the application process, Carolyn Sell is happy to help out, and Fire Safe Sonoma is also creating a step-by-step procedure to follow to make this easier for all neighborhood groups. Stay tuned for more info about this. SAVE THE DATE: To Learn About Rainwater Catchment Systems Demo Day at Charlotte’s Web Farm 3395 Harrison Grade Road, Sebastopol. See flyer here! Come learn about rainwater catchment systems, earthworks for slowing, spreading and sinking water, and biochar production for soil enrichment. Saturday, March 18 10am-3pm Karmendra Rossy of nucleusdesign.org will provide a tour of the earthworks and water catchment system (15k gallons and irrigation set up for farm) Gray Shaw of blackripple.com will be doing demos of woodpile construction for biochar conservation burns, as well as his small kiln set up RSVP at: charlotte@knoxeducation.com The Friends of Rio Nido The Friends of Rio Nido (FRN) is a 501c3 non-profit organization established in 2010 to enhance the quality of life for Rio Nido residents and act as a liaison between our community and government and business interests. The FRN Board works closely with the Lower Russian River Municipal Advisory Council, established to advise the Board of Supervisors and other County agencies on local planning and management decisions impacting the region, and encourage citizen participation and communication with their elected representatives. Of the approximately 570 Rio Nido households, FRN has a membership which includes 473 active email contacts (our primary form of communication). Board meetings are held monthly and Member meetings are held bi-monthly, and are also scheduled as-needed for special situations. The Board’s work includes actively participating in numerous ways to improve our community’s ability to identify and report issues related to safety, security, and quality of life by working closely with local law enforcement, public safety officials, and other governing agencies. Rio Nido is one of a select number of areas that is currently working with the County on a Shaded Fuel Break (SFB) project around the perimeter of Rio Nido—designed by CALFire as part of a growing connected network of SFBs throughout West County to aid in mitigating the spread of wildfire, while also improving access for emergency teams. FRN has now established an Emergency Preparedness Committee modeled after the work of FireSafe Occidental and Safer West County—designed to be a community resource for hands-on work with our individual landowners and residents. The Board is deeply grateful for all of the outstanding work these organizations (and so many others) have already done to pave the way for FRN to be able to dive into this work with a solid foundation. For contact information:David Rosen, Friends of Rio Nido BoardDavid@OrdinaryMiracles.com 707-431-4256 Information about Water Catchment Rebate program for Sonoma County residents Now is the time to put in a tank while the rains will still fill it. You get reimbursed 50 cents for every gallon of storage you create, for example a 2000 gallon tank gets you $1000 rebate. Here is the application form:Sonoma County Rainwater Rebate Small System Application Here is an informative website and webinar about the program:Sonoma County Rainwater Harvesting Rebate Program Harmony Farm Supply has a demo area and if you make an appointment for a water catchment tank consult, they will email you a worksheet to fill in before your consult so that they can help you select needed plumbing parts etc. Roberta MacIntyre receives Harry Quinlan Award Roberta MacIntyre, director of Fire Safe Sonoma, sat in the room with our Fire Chiefs and Fire Prevention Officers at the recent Fire Chiefs Luncheon, listening to the agenda items and watching Chiefs sworn into new their positions. Also on the agenda for this meeting was the Harry Quinlan Award. This agenda item has always held a special place in Roberta’s heart as she worked alongside Harry Quinlan, admired and appreciated him and the role he played in the community and personally in her life. Over the past years, she has often been the one presenting this award to other deserving fire firefighters. As the remembrance of Harry Quinlan’s life was read out, Roberta sat wondering who the award would be given to this year. The winners bio was read, omitting their name and Roberta started to think that this individual had done a lot of the same things that she had done over the years… Suddenly it clicked; this year, the award was being presented to her! Long overdue, and so well deserved, Roberta stood to collect the award, surrounded by applause and a standing ovation from everyone in the room. Additionally, community members from across the county wrote their messages to Roberta to share their gratitude for all of the knowledge, support, time and guidance she generously volunteers. These messages were presented to her alongside photos in a book. Thank you to everyone who contributed! Thank you, thank you, thank you Roberta MacIntyre for all you have done over the years AND continue to do for fire prevention in Sonoma County! ![]() Safer West County is seeking a Communications Specialist who can help us manage the various outreach for our recently awarded CalFire grant. The position will work closely with our past President to create a communications plan and calendar, draft press releases, update web pages, create promotional materials, and create social media posts throughout the 3-year grant cycle. This is a part-time paid position. To inquire about this position please send us information about your interest and experience at:info@saferwestcounty.org If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
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January 14, 2023
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter January, 2023Contents for this NewsletterSign Up Today For A Free Structure Risk Assessment!Sonoma County Energy & Resilience Workshop SeriesWatch Duty Relaying Information Fast!Apple’s new iPhone Emergency SOS Saving LivesWest Sebastopol Community CouncilFire Safe Guerneville NewsFire Safe Occidental NewsSign Up Today For A Free Structure Risk Assessment! Hello Sonoma County Resident, We are thrilled to announce that the free Structure Risk Assessment scheduler is now live! You must be in the project area to sign up for a free assessment. You can check to see if you are in the project area on SoCoAdapts.org on our program MapViewer. If you are in the project area, information will pop up on your parcel that includes an invite that goes to the Assessment Scheduler. If your parcel is in the Wildfire Adapted 2 project area, you will be added to a wait list so we can prioritize your signup as soon as we open assessments for that area. Once your assessment is completed, you will receive a detailed report of wildfire risk to your home or business and you may become eligible for up to $7,000 in rebates for hardening your structure. To help us perform these assessments, we have contracted with Wildfire DefenseWorks and Madronus Wildfire Defense. There are a limited number of Structure Risk Assessments available in each of the project areas—be sure to schedule your Structure Risk Assessment as soon as possible. For more information about the Sonoma County Wildfire Adapted program, please visit SoCoAdapts.org. If you have any questions or concerns about your Structure Risk Assessment, contact us at WildfireAdapted@sonoma-county.org. Thank you, Permit Sonoma Fire Prevention Division Sonoma County Energy & Resilience Workshop SeriesThe County of Sonoma, Climate Action and Resiliency Division has announced the latest homeowner workshops in an on-going series for those interested in learning more about the benefits of making improvements that will help make your home more energy efficient and resilient. Go here to find out more and signup for the workshops. Watch Duty Relaying Information Fast!Did you know that Watch Duty reporters monitor first responder radio communications in real-time 24/7? This is how they are able to relay information to you so fast – but if they can’t hear, they can’t help. After identifying millions of acres of Internet radio dead zones throughout the state Watch Duty knew that in order to serve our communities better they had to take a hard swing at solving this problem. The Watch Duty volunteer team has gone above and beyond the call of duty again to build radio scanners that are being deployed throughout California to these dead zones to ensure that their reporters can hear into the deepest forests.Read the full story here Apple’s new iPhone Emergency SOS Satellite Service Already Saving Lives Just released for service in late November, Apple’s new Emergency SOS via satellite service has already been successfully used to rescue people in desperate and remote situations. Here is one articleof a rescue after a car went off a cliff north of Los Angeles. Here is other another article of a rescue using the service in remote Alaskan wilderness by someone that became stranded on their snow mobile. West Sebastopol Community Council The nascent West Sebastopol Community Councilhas projects underway. If you are interested in participating, please contact us: wscc@gmail.com. There is a great deal we can do to reduce the risk of and prepare for disasters, keep home insurance at reasonable rates, and enhance our community. (Also, please join Safer West County.) We can only do it TOGETHER!!! 1. Community grazing will begin with four neighboring properties on Celesta Court. Funding for infrastructure has been obtained from Goldridge RCD, which will include fencing, water troughs, and costs for clearing corridors for fencing. Property owners are expected to contribute about 15%, but details remain to be worked out. A grazing plan is being developed using cattle from the adjacent Harston Ranch. Additional properties adjacent to the ranch are being recruited to participate in future phases of this work. If you are interested, email us. 2. Additional community grazing projects using goats and possibly sheep, are being developed in collaboration with Sarah Keiser who is fostering Community Grazing Cooperatives. Sarah is also including this work as a site in her grant submission for CalFire funding. Funding will be obtained to offset hopefully most of the costs of infrastructure. The goal is to install permanent fencing with wide open gates for wildlife passage when grazing is not underway. This will allow the essential annual maintenance at low ongoing costs. We need motivated property owners. Contact us! 3. Several neighbors along our targeted area along Barnett Valley and Burnside, have been working on reducing fuel in defensible space and beyond and in hardening their homes against wildfire. We are working to expand assistance to those homeowners who need guidance or direct support for this work. This type of work is essential to counter insurance companies moves to cancel insurance or raise rates. Please get involved! 4. A long-range goal is to restore the watershed and fireshed along Ebabias creek and surrounding areas, which will entail slowing and spreading drainage, addressing erosion, and taking a regenerative approach to vegetation and fuel reduction. This work would allow much more water to be retained during atmospheric river events, enhancing the water table and health of soil and vegetation. 5. A long-range goal is developing a virtual elder village that would support seniors to age-in-community in their own homes. This effort will partner with well-established local organizations to access infrastructure and resources and with the national organization fostering such efforts, the Village-to-Village-Network. 6. We have held free CPR trainings in the past and will repeat this training in the coming months. Training will include use of AEDs (Automatic External Defibrillation devices) and support will be available for neighborhoods interested in installing their own AEDs. That is the best way to ensure that someone can survive a cardiac arrest with their brain intact. Ask Damar Hamlin, who just left the hospital. Fire Safe Guerneville News FSG board members have been working with county officials and local nonprofits to get information, NOAA weather radios and a new flood level tracking tool out to the residents of the Lower Russian River. FireSafe Guerneville is forming a Russian River GMRS radio network. For more information on this program or how to become involved with FSG please contact us at: FireSafe-Guerneville.org or 707-873-4323. Fire Safe Occidental News Condolences to the family in our Joy Rd. Neighborhood who lost a toddler due to a falling tree. And thanks to the community for stepping up with substantial GoFundMe help. FSO has stepped forward with our shopping, cooking and baking skills to help our firefighters continue their non-stop work during these heavy storms. Our first responders have been pressed to their limits, and having food on hand saves time and gives them the much-needed energy boost to continue the work. They are always grateful for yummy donations and we will soon be providing a larger freezer for them so they will have plenty of space to store more food. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
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January 1, 2023
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter End of Year Review, 2022Contents for this NewsletterSafer West County AccomplishmentsFire Safe Community AccomplishmentsWays you can get involvedSafer West County Accomplishments 1. Expanded Fire Safe Communities: Our community engagement continues to grow. Safer West County supported the growing Fire Safe Communities (below), and each has made progress this year in key areas: GuernevilleForestvillePocket CanyonCamp MeekerOccidental In 2023 we plan to encourage active work in those communities as well as Freestone, Monte Rio, Graton, and Bodega/Bodega Bay. If you are interested in joining your community’s fire safe efforts, please reach out and we will connect you with others doing work in your area. SaferWestCounty@gmail.com 2. Awarded $1.2 million CAL FIRE grant in collaboration with Fire Safe Sonoma: We are extremely excited to announce that Safer West County and Fire Safe Sonoma were awarded a three-year capacity building grant to support Safer West County’s goals along the Bohemian Corridor to decrease fuels, educate our community, and increase engagement in Monte Rio, Forestville, Camp Meeker, and Occidental Fire Safe Councils. The grant includes funds for:Direct financial assistance to qualifying residentsin these four communities to support defensible space work.Four chippers housed at each of the four fire stations in these communities to be used for free community chipping programs run by the individual Fire Departments and supported by each Fire Safe Councils.Educational Programs across Western Sonoma. Help creating Firewise neighborhoods. The details of this program will be announced in the first few months of 2023. Watch this newsletter for more information. Funding for this project provided by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Fire Prevention Program as part of the California Climate Investments Program. ![]() In the spring, AmeriCorps volunteers removed considerable fuel around Camp Meeker and St Dorothy’s and many members of the community came and joined in the effort, greatly increasing the scope of the work completed. The group worked on the frontage along Bohemian Highway by the Fire Department and the Post Office, demonstrating what defensible space really is. Work on fire roads on the perimeter of Camp Meeker created better access for fire equipment and a shaded fuel break. The work on the hillsides around the main St. Dot’s compound completed their defensible space perimeter. 4. Educational Programing: We held the “Beyond Defensible Space” webinar in conjunction with Fire Safe Sonoma and Sonoma Ecology Center on land stewardship for wildfire resilience beyond 100’ of defensible space 5. Installed GMRS repeater in West Sebastopol to increase radio coverage in West County: Funded by Sonoma County and working with GMRS repeater experts in the Cazadero area to improve full coverage across West County, this repeater filled an important hole in coverage. We are hoping to receive more funds this coming year to expand the number of GMRS radio networking neighborhoods throughout our area. Fire Safe Community Accomplishments The biggest accomplishment of 2022 in Safer West County is the growing participation in our Fire Safe Communities throughout West County. These volunteers are making a difference in your neighborhood in meaningful ways directly tied to what each community needs. Below you will see what has been happening across our area. We highly encourage you to get involved in your local Fire Safe Community. You will make new friends and add to the resiliency of your home. Fire Safe Camp Meeker What a year for Camp Meeker! A number of “Campers”, inspired to take action, did their part to make Camp Meeker a safer place to live. At the center of most every action was Fire Safe Camp Meeker. We are growing and making a difference. Join us! Setting the example early in the season, Safer West County organized Americorp volunteers along with Fire Safe Camp Meeker, St. Dorothy’s Rest, and community volunteers. These groups all came together to build resilience, creating a greater fire break along Bohemian Highway. The work included trimming trees, clearing fire vulnerable invasive species and chipping forest litter. This work inspired community members to come together every other weekend to maintain the work and expand out to other areas of Camp Meeker. Also touched by inspiration, Kyle Gift ran and ran! Folks railed behind Kyle, sponsoring his run to the top of Pole Mountain. His run earned Kyle enough money to buy a chipper which has been fired up and is assisting fire hardening happening all around Camp Meeker! Not to be forgotten is St. Dorothy’s Rest, a great partner to Fire Safe and the greater Camp Meeker Community. St. Dorothy’s has done their part by cutting a huge fire break around the perimeter of Camp Meeker and kept their property at the top of the hill a shining example for the rest of us. We are looking forward to more work days and greater progress in 2023. Fire Safe Freestone During 2022, Fire Safe Freestone provided an orientation to new neighbors focused around evacuation, green address signage, radios and communications, chipping, and vegetation management. We introduced folks to the resources of Safer West County’s website, Watch Duty, and Pulse Point. Once open, we plan to provide local wildfire information at the Freestone Store. Fire Safe Freestone volunteers have supported other neighbors in creating shaded fuel breaks on their properties. It really does take a village to do the work and the more we come together the more we accomplish. If you are interested in getting involved, please reach out. Fire Safe Forestville The Forestville group made many strides this year including in various neighborhoods within the Forestville area. We staffed a booth at the weekly Forestville farmer’s market and started gathering a lot of interest in our group. However, we need a few individuals to help organize us and move this effort forward. If you are interested, please reach out via SaferWestCounty@gmail.com The Hollydale-Canyon-Terrace neighborhoods of Forestville are a great example of what can happen when a group of neighbors come together. This group accomplished a lot and celebrated their one-year anniversary. They drafted a Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) for their area that looked at what their key assets are, where the main risks to their community are, and created a set of priorities moving forward. Their CWPP is currently being reviewed by the community for suggestions. The draft will go to Sonoma County’s CWPP once completed. Other things the Hollydale-Canyon-Terrace group accomplished include: They organized a chipping event with Recology Greens Bin Applied and received funding for a Roadside Vegetation Management GrantHeld both governmental and community stakeholders meetings Our area is also growing Fire Wise Communities that help all of us in this forest. This means we are gaining a chain of communities in our forest to qualify for Fire Wise benefits, including helping us with insurance.Hollydale-Canyon-Terrace neighborhoods started a Fire Wise application Summerhome Park and Hacienda are already Fire Wise certified communitiesWe are looking for other neighborhood areas to do the same in 2023. If you need help, reach out to Safer West County or these groups that have already done the process ![]() ![]() Fire Safe Monte Rio Fire Safe Monte Rio had a booth at the Monte Rio Festival talking with people, giving out literature, and beginning to build a contact list. The booth was right next to the Fire Dept. and on the other side was a Watch Duty booth. All three were constantly busy and people were interested in the information. We’ve interacted with neighbors while out on walks and gotten positive input. We hope to build on this in 2023! Fire Safe Guerneville Fire Safe Guerneville (FSG) had a robust start as an organization in 2022. We held the first Wildfire Readiness Week in February. This event featured 6 nightly presentations on topics such as wildfire behavior, vegetation management, home hardening as well as issues relating to evacuating during an emergency. Presentations were staged with the cooperation of our new local bookstore, Russian River Books and Letters. Elise Weiland from the District 5 Supervisor’s office provided necessary technology so residents could participate via Zoom. Many local businesses provided items for gift bags. The GMRS (General Mobile Radio Service) Project and members of the Sonoma County ACS (Auxiliary Communications Services) provided hands-on tutorials on handheld GMRS radios and amateur (ham) radios. In April we tabled at the RiverArts Festival, handing out evacuation packs and tags as well as NOAA Weather Radios. Our Board members participated in several neighborhood presentations throughout the spring sponsored by the Sonoma County’s Office of Emergency Management. We teamed up with Watch Duty and the GMRS Project at various locations to help residents load alert systems on their phones and explain the use of GMRS radios. We completed work on the installation of a GMRS repeater and antenna on Devil’s Backbone Ridge, just north of Guerneville. This system allows residents in the valleys of Guernewood and Guernewood Park access the GMRS system. The repeater was donated by the Monte Rio Firefighters Foundation. The antenna was funded and installation work done by Watch Duty founder Damian Boune, GMRS Project Founder Tony Goodwin, and FSG volunteer Harry Haigler. In June we successfully completed our application as a 501(c)3 organization, allowing us to accept tax deductible donations. This past summer FSG hosted a booth at the weekly Guerneville Farmer’s Market, handing out over 50 NOAA radios and wildfire related information. Large maps of recent fires and evacuation zones created by FSG board member and Watch Duty member Josh Leone helped us engage residents in discussing the realities of living in Fire country. We provide an opportunity for people to tell their stories of how fires have affected them and how they plan to be ready for the next emergency. In August the Russian River Rotary Club hosted the first “Rockin’ the River” event in 2 years and Fire Safe Guerneville was there in partnership with Watch Duty and the GMRS Project. We continue to work with the County to get permission to post the Fire severity sign created by the late Jim Laughlin at 116/River Road. We were part of the float sponsored by Safer West County and other river area fire safe councils at the Guerneville Parade of Lights on December 17th. And lastly, we will be the beneficiaries of the April 15, 2023 Russian River Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence Bingo. Our “Smokey the Bear Bingo” will raise funds to keep FSG doing good work for our river community for another year! Alina Matutes Haigler, President Eva Williams, Secretary Brian Ohm, Treasurer Nic Pereira, Communications Officer Josh Leone, IT Officer Juli O’Malley, Procurement Officer ![]() Fire Safe Occidental In 2022, FSO was busy with number of programs, which included:Testing and rolling out a local alert program using One Call Now as alternative emergency notification, especially useful for local emergencies that have not yet registered for County-wide alerts. Fire Safe Occidental has 16 different neighborhood groups and each now has the ability to make an single call to send an alert to their own neighborhood and the Fire Safe Occidental Steering Committee has the ability to do so across the entire Occidental area.Creating the first Firewise neighborhood in Occidental One of Fire Safe Occidental neighborhoods has applied to be a Firewise community and will be creating a template to help other Safer West County neighborhoods apply. This may become very important for retaining or binding property insurance and keeping rates from skyrocketing as some insurance carriers are offering discounts for properties in a Firewise neighborhood.We held an Emergency Alerts Program at Occidental Center for the Arts which brought together experts from Watch Duty, Sonoma County’s Office of Emergency Management, and the GMRS Project.Applied for and received $10,000 from CA Fire Foundation with Safer West County as fiscal sponsor to fund chipping. Half of the grant has been spent on clearing and chipping on Harrison Grade Road. This work completes a shaded fuel break along one of our critical evacuation routes and between the Harrison Grade Preserve and Occidental. It is an extension of the work done by our Americorp Team, crews from Circuit Riders and many neighbors in late 2021. That work was a collaborative effort between the Harrison Grade neighborhood, FSO, SWC and the State Fish and Wildlife. The rest of the funding will be used in 2023 to support neighborhood chipping days. ![]() ![]() you can get involved and hope you will take advantage of a few Volunteer to be on a SWC committee or take the lead on a single one-time project.Help with CALFIRE grant Project Management. We will need volunteers to help organize our chipping and incentive programs in Monte Rio, Forestville, Camp Meeker and Occidental. Education & Communication Committeehas needs in the following areas:Help with social mediaHelp with educational programsManage our website(s), make updates as new material is availableDrafting newsletters or articles for newsletters Business Committee has need for help with:Identifying and writing grants Liaisons to other agencies and groups related to fire, emergency preparedness, safety… (what groups do you already belong to?)Work with other Fire Safe Organizations to bring in knowledge from other communities Fire mitigation and Emergency Preparedness committee has opportunities to:Research new technologies in safety, communications, or fire mitigation that could serve our communities Volunteer to represent your neighborhood to your Fire Safe Community or represent your Fire Safe Council to Safer West County. We need people in:Monte RioGuernevilleForestvilleGratonCamp MeekerOccidentalBodega/Bodega BayFreestoneWest Sebastopol Organize a workday in your neighborhood. Collect contact info. Please also donate to keep this important work moving.If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2022 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
November 20, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Giving Tuesday November 29, 2022Giving Tuesday Tuesday, November 29th is “Giving Tuesday.” In the spirit of Thanksgiving, we want to give thanks for the volunteers who make up Safer West County, for our communities which are working hard at building resilience and for you, the people who make living here great. We hope you find our work helpful to you personally and to the specific area you live in. We are happy to report that fire safe organizations are growing in West Sonoma County! Please consider a donation to help fund Safer West County’s volunteer efforts and if possible consider getting involved in your local Fire Safe Council. Your donation helps us buy tools for community work days, apply for and orchestrate grants, host our website, and hold webinars. Also, please consider helping as a volunteer. Your time could be the difference in Safer West County. We will be tracking volunteer hours in 2023 to serve as matching for grant applications. Your work could help us bring important educational material to our community, or improve our alert systems. Whatever your finances, skills, and passions, there is a place for you to contribute to a safer and more connected West County. Donations can be made either to Safer West County itself or on behalf of your local Fire Safe Council. Simply make a notation on your donation and we will be sure it is allocated as you prefer. Thanks for being WEST COUNTY! DONATE! You can donate now for Giving Tuesday If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com |
November 4, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter November, 2022Contents for this NewsletterA Pessimist’s Guide to Functional HopeWatch Duty Inaugural Fund RaiserWatch Duty New Wind Visualization LayerGUIDE TO SUSTAINABLE DEFENSIBLE SPACEApple’s new iPhone emergency satellite communication still expected to start in NovemberFire Safe Guerneville NewsFire Safe Occidental NewsA Pessimist’s Guide to Functional Hope It is easy to feel despair with years of fires and constant news of climate change. Yet, only hope can fuel the efforts we need to make individually and collectively to create the future we want to leave for future generations. It is our wish that the work we do at Safer West County helps you have hope, inspires you to action, and brings us all together as a community. This wonderful article by Laurel Kays published by The Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network reflects on the future of fire adaptation, the hard truths and realities of our work as fire practitioners, and the ever-persistent need for hope. Read this great article here: fireadaptednetwork.org/a-pessimists-guide-to-functional-hope/ Watch Duty Inaugural Fundraiser Watch Duty is celebrating its state-wide launch and having discussions about the future of citizen resilience at this upcoming event below. November 12th from 6-10PM at Little Saint in Healdsburg. Tickets and info at www.WatchDuty.org/tickets ![]() When enabled, the layer animates wind “particles” that move in the direction of the prevailing surface wind. The length of the line indicates speed; the longer the line the higher the speed. They’re hoping this new layer gives you even more important wildfire information in one trusted place. To use the new layer, along with Watch Duty’s other layers, click on the layer icon in the bottom left corner of your map. If you don’t see this new layer, please update your app from the App Store to the newest version 2022.10.21. ![]() This guide offers valuable defensible space guidelines, identifies defensible space myths, and great information on home landscapes that can support critical ecosystems. The guide was produced by Resilient Landscapes Coalition a partnership among Habitat Corridor Project, Sonoma Ecology Center, The UC Master Gardener Program of Sonoma County and FireSafe Sonoma. Get this trifold here. Apple’s new iPhone 14 emergency satellite communication still expected to start in November As we reported in the last SWC Newsletter, Apple will support emergency satellite communication starting with their new iPhone 14 models. We know Apple won’t turn on this service until November but as of this Newsletter it has not been released. SWC is ready to review, evaluate and report on this new service as soon as it is turned on. Stay tuned! Fire Safe Guerneville News The Annual Guerneville Holiday Parade of Lights on main street in downtown Guerneville, Saturday, Dec. 3rd, will feature many colorful, creative and brightly lit floats and marching contingents. It might even have an SWC float… come and see! ![]() Just a few Neighborhoods have met in order to test the One Call Now system. We would like to encourage all Neighborhood Leaders to set up a meeting time with their groups so that everyone understands how to use the program. We will have someone familiar with the One Call Now attend your meetings in case of questions. Neighborhood #13 has a meeting planned for Sunday, Nov. 20th at 2 pm in case any Leaders want to drop in to see how one of our more active and organized groups gets the ball rolling in their community (thank you Mercedes, Iva and Elizabeth!). Contact Carolyn Sell for more information. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2022 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
October 16, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter October, 2022Contents for this NewsletterCBS news coverage on Sonoma homeowners building up defensesFire Fighting JargonApple’s new iPhone 14 emergency satellite communication starts in NovemberSignup for FSO Community ChippingFire Safe Guerneville NewsFire Safe Occidental NewsCBS News Coverage Sonoma Homeowners Building up Wildfire Defenses Watch this CBS coverage of how our own Alina Haigler and others in Sonoma County are preparing for wildfires. Fire Jargon Josh Leone of WatchDuty has kindly shared with us this list of fire fighting jargon you might come across. We will continue to update this as we get it. Apple’s new iPhone 14 emergency satellite communication starts in November As we reported in the last SWC Newsletter, Apple will support emergency satellite communication starting with their new iPhone 14 models. We now know this will happen, but Apple won’t turn on this service until November (next month). Meanwhile, here is what Apple is already sayingabout their new service. SWC is ready to review, evaluate and report on this new service as soon as it is turned on. Stay tuned! Signup for FSO Community Chipping During the 2nd and 3rd weeks of July, the County “Community” Chipping program chipped 30+ properties within our community. The next “Community” chipping will take place sometime in November. To sign up for the November chip, contact dshatkin@sonic.net. Fire Safe Guerneville News Fire Safe Guerneville will be hosting a booth at the Dia de Los Muertos Event event on Oct. 29. There will be NOAA radios, evacuation packets and tags, as well as piñatas ready to be decorated by kids of all ages! ![]() Fire Safe Occidental is slowly rolling out the use of the One Call Now system for community emergency alerts. Already a couple of Neighborhoods have run their test-calls, and several others have them scheduled. If your Neighborhood hasn’t scheduled one yet, be sure to check in with your Neighborhood Leader to find out if it is in the planning stages. All of our names have been uploaded into the system as long as you have a phone number and email address on file with FSO.___ Neighborhood #1 is conducting a survey to see how much progress each homeowner has made in creating defensible space and home hardening. This will give us a baseline for comparing the work done in future years. The Fire-Wise application will be ready to submit as soon as this data is collected, analyzed, and Pod Maps completed.___ Join the fun at OCA for this year’s kids’ halloween party! Costume contest, entertainment and more followed by a ‘parade’ through Occidental for trick or treating at local businesses. Last year’s party was so much fun! Don’t miss out – save the date! Sunday, October 30, 2022 1:00 PM 4:00 PM If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
September 10, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter September, 2022Contents for this Newsletter California to recognize and reward wildfire safety and mitigation effortsReady For Wildfire (CalFire)Prior Planning Saves LivesApple’s new iPhone 14 supports emergency satellite communicationDay of the Dead Fair w/FireSafe GuernevilleFire Chief Marshall Turbeville honoredSignup for FSO Community Chipping California to recognize and reward wildfire safety and mitigation efforts made by homeowners and businesses While Safer West County does not yet have experience with this new push for wildfire mitigation work to decrease insurance costs, this press release from California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara is encouraging. It means that the hard work that many of you in West County have been doing will pay off in both reducing the risk of losing your home to fire AND perhaps a lower insurance rate. We will keep you posted on this as it unfolds. Also, so you don’t miss it, a previous press release talks about the “Safer from Wildfires” framework to protect existing homes and communities, which is part of the plan Commissioner Lara proposes. Currently, one of FS Occidental’s neighborhood groups is working on becoming a Firewise USA Community which is one of the ways to meet the requirements of this insurance metric. Safer West County will periodically send you info from their investigation into the process in our newsletters to help you organize your own neighborhoods. In the meantime, any neighborhood interested in learning more now can go here. Ready For Wildfire! Wildfire season is here. What can you do to be prepared? Visit readyforwildfire.org to help you plan. This CalFire website is another great tool to help you know what you can do to plan and be ready for wildfire events. Prior Planning Saves LivesHere are a few important items from our August 4th Sonoma County Alert meeting. 1. Put these SoCo Alert numbers in your contacts as favorites, so they by-pass your DoNotDisturb setting at night in the case of an emergency:866-519-5000 or866-419-50002. Know your Evacuation Zone. Go here now to verify it. Then post it in your house and perhaps save it in your phone contacts for easy access if you receive an evacuation notification. It is hard to remember these things in an emergency. (NOTE: if you have a PO Box, the County might have your evacuation zone wrong for notifications.) 3. Make sure you are signed up to all alert systems possible and use multiple numbers if you have them because we never know why, but some numbers receive alerts when others don’t. Here are the alert systems we discussed at the meeting:SoCoAlert sign up here (alerts in Sonoma County by area)Nixle Alert sign up here (alerts are Countywide)Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) System (national and does not require signing up)NOAA radios (more info in next newsletter) Apple’s new iPhone 14 supports emergency satellite communication With the just announced Apple iPhone 14 models, Apple is adding a limited form of satellite connectivity to new iPhones that lets users send an SOS even when they’re off the grid (i.e., no cell or WiFi service available), no dish required. While it won’t allow ordinary data, voice, or text, it will alert emergency services with your circumstances and location. Safer West County is already looking into this, will be testing it soon, and will let our newsletter readers know more about this possibly game changing service as we learn more. ![]() Community Health and Engagement Fair 1-4pm October 29, 2022 FireSafe Guerneville will be at the 2nd annual Day of the Dead Community Health and Engagement Fair, with fun things to hand out! ![]() Fire Chief Marshall Turbeville earns national acclaim North Sonoma County Fire Chief Marshall Turbeville, already something of a local hero, is being honored as Volunteer Fire Chief of the Year by the 12,000-member International Association of Fire Chiefs network. Read the full PressDem article here. ![]() Signup for FSO Community Chipping During the 2nd and 3rd weeks of July, the County “Community” Chipping program chipped 30+ properties within our community. The next “Community” chipping will take place sometime in November. To sign up for the November chip, contact dshatkin@sonic.net. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2022 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
August 24, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter August, 2022Contents for this NewsletterIt Was a Great Panel of Experts!Ready For Wildfire (CalFire)PG&E Community Wildfire Safety Program WebinarWatch Duty Mid-Summer UpdatesSignup for FSO Community Chipping It Was A Great Panel of Experts! More than 60 folks attended the Fire Safe Occidental Panel of Experts held at Occidental Center for the Arts on August 4th. We learned more details about the various alert and notification systems from Sam Wallis, Community Alert and Warning Manager at Sonoma County’s Department of Emergency Management—including which ones to depend on it what circumstances and the importance of being signed up for multiple systems. We heard from Josh Leone, founder of Watch Duty, about how Watch Duty gets its information, how it is updated, and how we can best use this system. We also learned more about SoCo radio communications efforts—including GMRS and Amateur (Ham) Radio, from Darryl Paule, a principal in Sonoma County radio communications, and Dan Ethen of SoCo Emergency Management. Finally Fire Safe Occidental described its plans to deploy One Call Now, a system that allows neighbors to automatically send a message to everyone in their neighborhood alerting them of an emergency in the event of a local fire, or will allow Fire Safe Occidental to send an alert to all neighborhoods in a wider emergency. (See your neighborhood leaders for details on how to sign up.) Many thanks to Sam Wallis, Darryl Paul, Dan Ethen & Josh Leone. Many thanks to Carolyn Sell and Amy Beilharz who mc’d the event and gave the One Call Now presentation. There was so much good information covered, but too much for one newsletter. Over the next month we will be putting out Quick Notes to give you more details from this meeting. Stay tuned! Thanks to the Altamont for providing food! Ready For Wildfire! Wildfire season is here. What can you do to be prepared? Visit readyforwildfire.org to help you plan. This CalFire website is another great tool to help you know what you can do to plan and be ready for wildfire events. PG&E Community Wildfire Safety Program Webinar ______ Tuesday, August 30 5:30 – 7:00 PM Join PG&E for an interactive virtual webinar where they will discuss their 2022 wildfire safety efforts, including information about recent changes to Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) notifications. New this year, PSPS notifications will be provided via call, text and/or email during both day and night, depending on when outages may occur. PG&E previously refrained from sending notifications between the hours of 9 p.m. and 8 a.m. as a courtesy to customers. However, due to requirements from the California Public Utilities Commission, the policy has been updated. Moving forward, some PSPS notifications will now be sent to you regardless of the time of day. Participants will have the opportunity to ask questions about this change and share feedback with the PG&E team, including one of our vice presidents. Join PG&E during the webinar to learn about this change and about: • PG&E’s progress on wildfire prevention activities • What’s new this year:Increased powerline protection to reduce outagesImproved coordination for faster restoration timesAdditional customer resources to prepare for wildfire season and power outages To access the webinar or view recordings of past wildfire safety webinars, visit pge.com/firesafetywebinars. Do you have a plan to stay safe? For more information, including tips on how you and your family can stay safe in the event of an emergency, please visit safetyactioncenter.pge.com. Watch Duty Mid-Summer Updates As you may have noticed, Watch Duty has been a bit busy this fire season! Not only have they been updating our application to better support our community with more features for life and safety, but they have also have been onboarding more reporters as well as fire officials to provide more in-depth coverage. Here are some of the highlights that you may have missed from the past month. Go herefor the full story. Signup for FSO Community Chipping During the 2nd and 3rd weeks of July, the County “Community” Chipping program chipped 30+ properties within our community. The next “Community” chipping will take place sometime in November. To sign up for the November chip, contact dshatkin@sonic.net. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend If you have fire safety or emergency information that is related to your local West County community that you want us to publish please email us at: SaferWestCounty@gmail.com While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2022 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
July 27, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups QuickNote July 27, 2022This events is happening soon, on August 4, so we are sending you this QuickNoteFire Safe Occidental (FSO) Presents A Panel on Communications and alerts for Emergencies Thursday, August 4th 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm Occidental Center For The Arts The meeting will be held outside in the Amphitheater. Pre-Ordered Food Available!! Click on the poster below for more details. ![]() Forward to a Friend |
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July 23, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter July, 2022Contents for this Newsletter Communications & Alerts for Emergencies Event It’s That Time of Year Again! SoCo Library Presents – Emergency Preparedness FireSafe Guerneville at Rockin’ the River SoCo Connect Public Reporting PG&E “Report It” Mobile App Power in Guerneville in a PSPS Event Occidental Area GMRS Report Firewise Report from FSO SoCo Insurance Hikes Article United Policy SurveyFire Safe Occidental (FSO) Presents A Panel on Communications and alerts for Emergencies Thursday, August 4th 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm Occidental Center For The ArtsThe meeting will be held outside in the Amphitheater. Pre-Ordered Food Available!! ![]() Download this Emergency-Plan 2. Make Sure You Have Access To Alerts: NIXLE – Nixle Sonoma SOCO ALERT – SoCoAlert WATCH DUTY – WatchDuty PULSE POINT – PulsePoint 3. Know Your Evacuation Zone: Evacuation-zones 4. Learn The Basics Of Evacuation: Emergency-Evacuation-Checklist 5. Strategies For Dealing With Pg&E Power Outages: Prepare-for-PSPS Sonoma County Library Presents Emergency Preparedness Learn about Go Bags, Planning for Evacuations, signing up for Alerts, and local neighbor-to-neighbor groups preparing and supporting each other for emergencies. ![]() Rockin’ the River on Aug. 20th Come visit the Fire Safe Guerneville table during the Rockin’ the River event on Aug. 20th. We will have evacuation packs, tags and more to hand out! Stop by and meet some of the Watch Duty team members. Find out more about the Rockin’ the River event here. ![]() Sonoma County has launched ‘SoCo Connect’, a public reporting and tracking system for non-emergency service requests. This constituent relationship management system will offer an improved online service request portal and app for reporting and tracking services in English and Spanish in unincorporated areas of Sonoma County. Read more about this here. PG&E Report It A New Mobile App A new mobile app, PG&E Report It, makes it easy to report non-emergency safety concerns related to PG&E electrical equipment. This app is being launched as part of a pilot. During this pilot, usage of the app will be focused on reports from customers in high fire threat areas. Learn more about this app and how to download it here. Getting Emergency Power During PSPS Events in the Guerneville Area In the event of a Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS event) the West County Community Service Russian River Senior Resource Center (15010 Armstrong Woods Rd., Guerneville) will continue to provide power through an onsite PG&E generator. Individuals needing electricity for medical, communication, or other needs will be welcome. PSPS event swill be announced by PG&E. Occidental Area GMRS Report Fire Safe Occidental and Safer West County have been busy augmenting west county’s GMRS resources. The biggest news is the installation of a GMRS Repeater in the hills 1.5 mi west of downtown Occidental to provide greater reach in emergencies. This project was completed in early 2022 with the help of funding from Sonoma County through Lynda Hopkin’s office. Lear more about GMRS and this project here. Firewise Report From Fire Safe Occidental Fire Safe Occidental Neighborhood #1 (Harrison Grade) is going to start the process of getting Firewise USA recognition. The advantage is that this is the only designation (so far) that may help us keep our insurance coverage and keep rates within reasonable limits. Neighborhood #1 has experienced a lot of active participation and has been organized as a community for longer than the rest of us. They will serve as a “guinea pig” to see how easy or difficult the process is, and they will report in regularly so that other Neighborhoods can apply if they feel ready. Stay tuned for details. Sonoma County homeowners jolted with insurance hikes as a result of wildfire risk This Press Democrat article does a good job explaining why homeowners in Sonoma County are seeing their insurance rates go up. Read it here. United Policyholders Survey United Policyholders is a 501c3 non-profit that advocates for consumers at the CA Department of Insurance and elsewhere. They’re documenting the non-renewals and rate increases in areas that have experienced wildfires. If you’re interested in sharing your experience, you can take the survey here. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a FriendWhile not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2022 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
July 8, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups QuickNote July 8, 2022These events are happening this weekend, so we are sending you this QuickNoteSonoma County Library Presents Emergency Preparedness Saturday, July 9 2 PM Learn about Go Bags, Planning for Evacuations, signing up for Alerts, and local neighbor-to-neighbor groups preparing and supporting each other for emergencies. This Saturday’s (July 9) event includes Fire Safe Guerneville as well as the HALTER Project (see below). ![]() Saturday, July 9 2 PM Julie Atwood will also be at the Guerneville Library speaking, answering questions, and handing out 2022 Summer Animal Prep Handbooks for pets, equines, and backyard farm animals. Plus, the Library has HALTER Project materials (in Spanish, too) at the Resource Desk. Updated, “Need to Know” info to help keep animals-and people-safer. Please share, and tell a friend! and at the Friends of Monte Rio RioFest Monte Rio Amphitheater Saturday, July 9 2-6 PM Sara Paul will be at Rio Fest at the Monte Rio amphitheater from 2 to 6 tomorrow representing Watch Duty, Fire Safe Monte Rio, and GMRS radio users! If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a Friend |
![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2022 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 |
June 17, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter June, 2022Wildland Fuel Management Field Workshops ____ At OAEC Sat., July 9, 9am-1pm ____ At Santa Rosa Junior College’s Shone Farm Forest rescheduled for Sat., July 16, 9am-1pm Signup Now! Register Here: Wildland Fuel Management Workshop ![]() on Wildfires for All of California Make sure you have downloaded the most recent app for Watch Duty as now you can watch reports on every county in California. ![]() Sonoma County Rainwater Harvesting Rebate Program Sonoma County now offers rebates for installing rainwater harvesting systems anywhere in Sonoma County. Rebates will be provided for both small and large rainwater capture systems, based on a limited-time, first-come, first-served basis. This program is designed to reduce the barriers to installation by increasing the affordability of these systems and providing technical assistance for system design, installation, and troubleshooting. This program is being offered by Sonoma County and the California Department of Water Resources, in partnership with Gold Ridge Resource Conservation District (GRRCD), Sonoma Resource Conservation District (Sonoma RCD), and Daily Acts. You can find out more information at: savingwaterpartnership.org/programs_list/sonoma-county-rainwater-harvesting/ Visitors Can Now Get A New Brochure With Fire Safe Information FSO now has a tri-fold brochure with information specifically for shorter term rentals and airbnb properties. This is what you want to leave in your rental units for folks to see when they first arrive at your rental. You can pickup copies at the Friday afternoon Occidental Farmers Market from 4-6pm. A copy of this is also included in all our handout packets at both the Farmers Market and the Occidental Library. Below is what the tri-fold contains. To get a PDF of the brochure to print yourself, download it here. ![]() ![]() SWC Wildfire Information Packets Now Availble At The Occidental Library Occidental has a lovely small library on the right side of the Howard Station Cafe building. SWC has now made available our wildfire information packet there; just ask at the desk. To find out more about the library and when it is open, look here. Thank you to the Occidental Library staff! United Policyholders Survey United Policyholders is a 501c3 non-profit that advocates for consumers at the CA Department of Insurance and elsewhere. They’re documenting the non-renewals and rate increases in areas that have experienced wildfires. If you’re interested in sharing your experience, you can take the survey here. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a FriendWhile not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
April 28, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter April 28, 2022NOAA Weather Radio Emergency Alert Test Friday, April 29, Noon The County of Sonoma and the National Weather Service Bay Area are conducting an emergency alert test of NOAA weather radios on Friday, April 29, at noon. The test will be countywide for residents who own a NOAA weather radio. After the test, participants are encouraged to provide feedback on whether or not the test message was received by their radio. ”We encourage everyone in Sonoma County with a NOAA weather radio to participate in this exercise,” said District 4 Supervisor James Gore, Chair of the Board of Supervisors. “Learning to use the tools you have at your disposal during an emergency can be life saving for you and your family.” The alert will be sent at noon to all NOAA weather radios in Sonoma County. The warning alarm will sound one time, followed by a short test message and then a closing alarm tone. The test message will be transmitted as a Civil Emergency Message, and the words “Civil Emergency Message” may scroll across the visual displays of compatible radios. The radio test cycle will play through only one time. Device owners are encouraged to:Make sure the device is plugged in with backup batteries installed.Set up correctly per the radio manufacturer instructions.Ensure the radio is properly configured, additional instructions can be found in the video here: https://youtu.be/h8Rb500f8rwProvide feedback after the exercise by emailing info@socoalert.com or calling (707) 565-1369. Please include your location to help assess the range of the test alert.The County and NOAA utilize the alerting function on weather radios to notify the public of imminent hazards or threats, including evacuations, tsunamis and flood warnings. The radio itself broadcasts continuous weather information directly from the National Weather Service offices across the country. To prepare for an emergency, register for alerts or find your evacuation zone, visit: www.socoemergency.org/get-ready/. For more information about the NOAA weather radio alert exercise visit: https://socoemergency.org/get-ready/events-exercises/#April-29-NOAA. Chipping update Fire Safe Occidental 2022 Chipping scheduled for the week of July 11-15. If you are interested in being part of this free chipping please contact David Shatkin to sign up dshatkin@sonic.net. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a FriendWhile not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2022 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
April 9 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter April 2022Two Important Insurance News Items Public Hearing this Wednesday, April 13 from 1-5pm. The CA Dept. of Insurance (CDI) recently published proposed rules on wildfire risk rating and premium discounts. The Commissioner will hold a public hearing to provide all interested persons an opportunity to present statements or arguments, either orally or in writing, with respect to these regulations. Here is the link to Register for the Web-based Virtual Format: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_MoTcvOKCRdKSe9GAmZE5Hw In the proposed rules (which are subject to revision based on stakeholder feedback and, ultimately, Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara’s decision) CDI envisions changes to how admitted carriers base homeowners insurance rates and offer premium discounts for wildfire mitigation work undertaken by communities and property owners. The draft proposed rules can be found here, and a summary of them done by SWC Board Member Ivan O’Neill is here. SWC takes no official stance on the proposed rules, but if you’d like to provide written or verbal comments to CDI, you can do so here (see page 2). More important Info on Insurance, Tuesday, April 19th at 4:30pm. This is a free webinar on keeping your home insured when your options are limited and premiums are climbing: https://uphelp.org/events/r2papril19/ This webinar will cover: • What to do if your insurer non-renews you. • Is it safe to insure your home through a company you’ve never heard of? • What is the CA Fair Plan and what options does it offer for insuring a home? • What fine print matters when buying home insurance? • Questions to ask to get adequate protection in place for your home. Wildfire Tracking Class Put on by Lost in Forestville, this is a virtual class with step by step instructions for Watch Duty, Pulse Point, Scanner Radio, Alert Wildfire, AirVisual, Nixle, SoCo Alerts, and Midland NOAA Radios. Sign up here. Chipping update Fire Safe Occidental 2022 Chipping scheduled for the week of July 11-15. If you are interested in being part of this free chipping please contact David Shatkin to sign up dshatkin@sonic.net. Fire Safe Councils News: Fire Safe Forestville had a great turn out and many people sign up at their recent Town Hall that covered issues from fire safety to community roads and parks. If you live in Forestville or know someone who does and were unable to make it but still want to be connected, you can still sign up through Safer West County. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a FriendWhile not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
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March 9, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter March 2022In This Issue* Two thank you’s! and a Chipping update * Two town halls this week… March 10 * Improved Emergency Communications * Forestville Town Hall on March 30 * Guerneville and Occidental News Thank you! Safer West County and Fire Safe Occidental want to thank two groups that have continued to support our efforts to improve the safety of our communities: A big thanks to Chief Ron Lunardi and the Occidental Fire Department for hosting fire extinguisher classes. Another big thank you to County Chief Steve Mosiurchak and Angela Perez for their continued help scheduling free chipping services throughout West County. We are awaiting dates for the next FSO “Community” chipping. The County, however, permits two “individual” chippings per property per year. Sign up here starting in April: https://sonomacounty.ca.gov/PRMD/Fire-Prevention/Vegetation-Management-Services/Curbside-Chipper-Program/ This Week Town Hall: Wildfire Risk and Insurance Thursday, March 10 at 5:30 p.m. there will be a Virtual Town Hall on Wildfire Risk and Insurance, hosted by Sonoma County Supervisor Lynda Hopkins and the University of California Cooperative. Discussions will address concerns around wildfire risk and insurance, with topics including: What can we do to reduce our risk of losing our insurance coverage? What does the scientific research tell us about how can we reduce the risk to our lives and property from the threat of wildland fire? What is on the horizon from the state? What can the county do to help landowners manage their wildfire risk? Speakers include: Dr. Stephanie Larson, UC Cooperative Extension Sonoma County Director and Livestock Range Management Advisor Michael Newman, Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety Senator Mike McGuire (tentative) Chief Ben Nicholls, CalFire Sashi Sabaratnam, UC Cooperative Extension Wildfire Vegetation Mitigation Program Manager Caerleon Safford, Permit Sonoma Zoom information: https://sonomacounty.zoom.us/j/97837869122?pwd=VGpPS3BzQnA2d3BGV3diSVJ0N0Z3UT09 Passcode: 318019 No registration is required. Please submit questions prior by emailing leo.chyi@sonoma-county.org, or feel free to use the question and answer function on the Zoom during the town hall. If you can’t attend, the recording will be available on Supervisor Hopkin’s Facebook page following the meeting: https://www.facebook.com/supervisorlyndahopkins. This Week Sonoma Water to Host Virtual Drought Town Hall The Sonoma County Water Agency (Sonoma Water) will host a Virtual Drought Town Hall on Thursday, March 10 at 6:00 p.m. through a Zoom webinar. The town hall will focus on continued drought conditions in the Russian River watershed. Speakers will include representatives from: Sonoma Water, California Department of Water Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service, Santa Rosa Water, Sonoma County Farm Bureau, and State Water Resources Control Board. Speakers will discuss ongoing drought conditions, water supply management efforts, and conservation measures. Zoom information: https://sonomacounty.zoom.us/j/99343832365?pwd=QUhndWQ5bk95dTIrMWRRL2ducVZCZz09 Passcode: 864640 Improving our emergency communications Safer West County received funds from the County, with the support of Lynda Hopkins’ office, to install a GMRS repeater on one of our member’s property 1.5 miles west of Occidental that has a high elevation, good support infrastructure and a good line of sight to improve communications in the greater Occidental, Bodega, Freestone, and Camp Meeker area. This repeater will allow community members with GMRS repeater capable radios to receive emergency alerts when other communications may be out due to power, fire, or other issues. During the next few months Safer West County members will be testing and planning how to organize an emergency communications network from neighborhoods & areas in reach of the GMRS repeater. We are seeking individuals who might have expertise in this area and want to participate in this endeavor. If you have any questions or want to join us, please send an email to Safer West County. Safer West County will provide more information and training as plans become more developed. For information on Neighborhood Emergency Radio Communications and how GMRS Repeaters fit into them, view Damian Bouné’s excellent presentation here. Thank you again to Sonoma County, and especially Lynda and her office staff, for helping to make this happen. Upcoming Events: Forestville Town Hall Focus on Forestville When: Wednesday, March 30, 2022 Time: 5:30 PM (Doors open at 5 PM) Where: Forestville Elementary School, Multi-Purpose Room/Gym, 6321 Hwy 116, Forestville Both In-Person & Via Zoom In-Person Attendees Must Show Proof of Covid Vaccinations. Masks Are Required. Zoom Link: https://sonomacounty.zoom.us/j/93915056157?pwd=dU1QQ2QyV0RJVkVmb0JhczAwK3VzUT09 Passcode: 452141 For agenda & more information, go here. Fire Safe Councils News: FireSafe Guerneville Celebrated its first annual Wildfire Readiness Week! FireSafe Guerneville held its first-ever Wildfire Readiness Week from Feb. 20-26, 2022, in downtown Guerneville. Six presentations on wildfire-related topics were held at the Russian River Books & Letters bookstore. People could also join Zoom and FaceBook live. We covered wildfire behavior, home hardening and defensible space, reducing fuels on large landscapes with grazing and prescribed fire and discussed the effects of recent fires in our local state parks. We had a panel of experts discuss evacuations from a wildfire incident and how to use emergency alerts. One day was dedicated to a Spanish language presentation on creating defensible space. We held a drawing for a prize at the end of each presentation, giving away go-bags provided by the Sonoma County Office of Emergency Services and CalFire, a first aid kit donated by Lark Rexall Drugs, and Spanish programmed NOAA radios provided by Jim Boggeri at Sonoma County Fire District. We heard from participants how much they appreciated having experts such as CalFire Battalion Chief Marshall Turbeville and Stuart Mitchell from Wildfire Mitigation Advisors available to answer questions. Jon Kanagy with the Resilient Landscapes Coalition brought in examples of mulch to show what not to use around the house and several native plants to consider adding beyond the 0–5-foot zone of the house. Che Casul with Circuit Rider made a great case for using grazing on your land to control excess fuel. State Park employee Chris Heintzelman showed us what happened inside Armstrong Woods and Austin Creek State Parks during the Walbridge Fire and how the parks are recovering. Lark Pharmacist Ann Blancke provided participants with resources on planning for your medications during emergencies and brought N-95 masks for attendees to take home. Misti Wood from the Sonoma County Sherriff’s Office explained the role of law enforcement officers during an evacuation and brought evacuation tags to hand out. Psychologist Kathie Kimsey led a lively discussion of emotional trauma related to persistent wildfire risk in our area. Jim Boggeri helped us understand the different emergency alerts and how fire agencies work with other first responders during a wildfire event. On the weekend days, we had outdoor demonstrations of 2-way GMRS radios at the Plaza. These radios are part of a grassroots movement to provide communication services when we lose telephone and internet access. Volunteers with the CazHills GMRS project were able to program radios for participants. Representatives from the Sonoma County Radio Amateurs Radio were also present to talk about amateur radio (ham radios). The Watch Duty app team of Damian Boune, Sara Paul, and Joshua Leone were on hand to talk about how they provided information during a wildfire incident. Two book readings for children, a visiting goat, and a fun scavenger hunt throughout town completed our weeklong event. The Guerneville Library and Sonoma Nesting Co. were among the locations where items were hidden. In addition to being places where items were hidden, Oli Gallery donated crayons for gift bags, and the Guerneville 5 & 10 provided a beautiful stuffed dragon and a Paw Patrol firefighter dalmatian stuffed dog as prizes. Elizabeth Lawson from Fire Safe Occidental and Safer West County provided 7 copies of “Odin, Dog Hero of the Fires” and “Spout, the Dragon who became a Firefighter” as prizes. The grand prize of a go-bag packed with items for use during an evacuation was donated by King’s Sport and Tackle. The young boy who won this prize lives in Guerneville and was very excited to win his big prize! We are very grateful to Safer West County for the loan of EZ up tents and materials and to Russian River Books & Letters for providing us a location for 7 days. We could not have done this without the help of the local emergency agencies, merchants, volunteers, and FSG board members. Thank you to all who came out and made this Wildfire Readiness Week a success! Check out our website www.firesafeguerneville.org for more information about future events. You can email us at firesafeguerneville@gmail or call 707-873-4323 to get involved. Fire Safe Councils News: Fire Safe Occidental Updates FSO is in the process of reviewing and updating its Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP). For those of you that might not be familiar with the document, it is a summary of the risks to a community from fire, and a plan to address them. Among other things, it looks at Evacuation, Communication, Fuels Reduction and Ignition Sources. It is extremely useful when applying for grants and is also a great way to define and prioritize our work as an organization. The FSO CWPP encompasses the entire Occidental Community Services District and was finalized in 2020. It is required to be updated periodically. On Sunday March 6th, Neighborhood Leaders gathered with the SC to help with reviewing our progress on current projects, identifying additional areas of concern and next steps. We’ll have additional meetings in the next few weeks to set priorities and define next steps. Community participation is welcomed. Contact your Neighborhood Leader if you would like to attend the next meeting. Neighborhood Leaders are also in the process of generating lists of the riskiest areas in each neighborhood. As many of you know, more and more funding is becoming available, and we’d like to be “shovel ready” to attack the vegetation work on these parcels as soon as dollars become available. If you know of an area that needs attention, be sure your Leader knows. If you don’t know who your Leader is send a message to carolynsell@gmail.com. If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a FriendWhile not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2022 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County saferwestcounty.org/ info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Subscribe to Safer West County |
February 5, 2022
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter February 2022Sonoma County Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) Sonoma County Planning Commission wants YOUR INPUT on their Community Wildfire Protection Plan. Here is the YouTube Video of the 5th District Public Review Meeting held recently. The Sonoma CWPP Draft can be found at: sonomacounty.ca.gov/PRMD/Fire-Prevention/Community-Wildfire-Protection-Plan/ You can comment right on the document so the county gets your input directly by following the instructions in the “2022 CWPP Review” block in yellow, just below the lead in paragraph. Please note: public comments are due by February 28, 2022. SoCo Fire Services restructure In case you missed it, many of our local fire departments have been consolidated. The details can be found in this Sonoma County Press release. Pepperwood Preserve series on Wildfires in Oak Woodlands. There is much debate around the wildfires we have been experiencing in recent years—their cause, our future role in stewarding the forests, and what constitutes stewardship. A lot of good research is being done and this is an interesting video of a webinar by UCB graduate student Kendall Calhoun, concerning wildlife’s response to a large wildfire in Mendocino (the Mendocino Complex). Grazing—as fuel reduction and soil enrichment As we enter into bird nesting season, much of our fuel reduction efforts need to go on hold. But if you include grazing animals in your toolbox, you can continue improving your fire resilience through out spring and summer. Read this lovely story by Che Casul for some great inspiration on how to get started. Animals, Emergencies & Disasters:What You Need To Know Now! Join Bodega Bay CERT and HALTER Project Founder-Director Julie Atwood for this important and timely presentation in an online workshop, February 7, 2022, 6-7:30 pm. Pets, equines, backyard farm animals, commercial livestock, and wildlife will all be discussed. See the Flyer for more details and how to register. Articles on Watch Duty Watch Duty became a valuable app resource for many last year to stay informed during fire season. Here are two interesting articles with more details about what they are doing. The Guardian SoCoNews FireSafe Guerneville FireSafe Guerneville is a recently formed grassroots organization with a mission to help Guerneville residents adapt to life in wildfire country. We have worked closely with CalFire, Sonoma County Fire Department, Fire Safe Sonoma, Safer West County and other local experts to assemble the current best practice guidelines for wildfire safety and make this information easily available to all. Our organization also is connecting with residents from all areas of Guerneville to learn what the community sees as priorities regarding wildfire safety. Our first annual Wildfire Readiness Week will be held in downtown Guerneville from Sunday, February 20 to Saturday, February 26, 2022. We have invited CalFire Battalion Chief, Marshall Turbeville, Stuart Mitchell from Wildfire Mitigation Advisors, Che Casul from Circuit Rider, and others to speak at an event that will be held at the new bookstore, Russian River Books & Letters, located at 14045 Armstrong Woods Rd, Guerneville. Tony Goodwin will provide hands-on demonstrations at the Plaza of two-way GMRS radios for use in emergency settings. We will be providing emergency handouts in both English and Spanish. Join in the fun and enter to win prizes with our scavenger hunt! A schedule of speakers and locations for the scavenger hunt will be on our website www.firesafeguerneville.org in early February. For more information please email us at firesafeguerneville@gmail.com or leave a message at 707-873-4323. Fire Safe Occidental Occidental sewer pipeline project Work is proceeding apace! The Sonoma County Water Agency is hosting an update meeting on the sewer pipeline project Thursday, February 10 at 5:30 pm. Look here for the meeting information and a link to register for the Zoom webinar. ![]() Joy Road continues to degrade, losing inches off the sides regularly on the steeper areas between Bodega Highway and Lauri Lane. The County has portions of the road slated for a new top in 2023, but they are not doing the entire damaged stretch. As an important evacuation route for many residents, we feel this is a grave mistake and are pushing to get this entire stretch improved. We are asking for community support in this matter. Please log complaints about the road safety of Joy Road either by calling Road Maintenance at 565-5100, or use SoCo Report It. Select the subheading that best describes the type of issue (pothole, vegetation overgrowth, etc.). Fill out the brief questionnaire and hit “Submit.” If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a FriendWhile not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
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DEcember 22, 2021
![]() Fire Safe Groups Newsletter December 2021 ![]() For those who attended Safer West County’s recent webinar, “Beyond Defensible Space: Vegetation Management Outside the 100 Foot Zone”, you know what a wealth of information was shared. For those of you who missed it, you can (and will want to) catch the full recording on YouTube here. Feel free to share/forward the recording with anyone. Michael Jones (UCCE forester) and Brock Dolman (OAEC wildlife biologist and land manager) gave very informative presentations showcasing options for landowners in western Sonoma County to manage their land outside of the 100-foot defensible space zone for fire resilience and natural resource protection. For those of you who attended and want to rewatch a specific section you can jump to each portion:For Ellie Insley’s intro, go to 4:45.For Michael’s presentation go to 17:40.For Brock’s presentation go to 50:53.For the Q&A portion, go to 1:24:55. Also, here is the list of Forestry Resources that we committed to get you that were shared during the webinar in case you’d like to research further, access expertise, or learn about grants. Thank you to Fire Safe Sonoma for funding this event and to Brock, Michael, Ellie, Jon, and Mason for producing a great event! Stay tuned for more opportunities to learn about land stewardship in Sonoma County in the new year. If you’d like to support the organizations that made this event possible in your year-end giving, we thank you for your generosity:Safer West CountyFire Safe SonomaSonoma Ecology Center On behalf of Safer West County, Fire Safe Sonoma, and the Sonoma Ecology Center, we wish you safe and happy holidays! 2021 PROJECT ROUNDUP In early 2021, with donations from our local hardware stores, Friedmans, Sebastopol Hardware and Occidental Hardware, and other supporters, SWC purchased hand tools to be used to support defensible space and fuels reduction projects by our first Americorp Team. Those tools have been put to good use this year! Americorp Team Defensible Space SWC’s first Americorp team was small but mighty! This spring, working with neighborhood leaders, they created defensible space around fourteen homes in Occidental, Freestone and Camp Meeker and also worked with the team at OAEC doing fuels reduction work. Neighborhood Work Days SWC’s tool collection was also used to support 6 neighborhood work days! (Contact Elizabeth at 650-796-7158 to reserve tools for your organization’s next work day.) LAST BUT NOT LEAST – The Amazing work at Harrison Grade Ecological Reserve Thanks to neighborhood volunteers (who put in countless hours), a Safer West County Americorps grant team, support from Fire Safe Sonoma, and Fish and Wildlife funding of Circuit Riders, a huge amount of dead debris has been chipped or burned on or surrounding the Harrison Grade EcologicalReserve. This work has decreased a significant fire risk to the communities of both Occidental and Camp Meeker. While this is a multi-year endeavor, the progress made this past month was incredible. Ron Lunardi, Chief of the VFD in Occidental, toured the work site, and is excited by the potential to lay fire lines to protect both the valuable manzanita in the Reserve, and the adjacent property. SWC Board Members Carolyn Sell and Paul Stange worked with all parties involved to coordinate this project. Starting with a massive, nearly impenetrable tangle of brush, with 2-3’ of dead wood on the ground, neighborhood volunteers worked on the private land surrounding the Reserve to clear dead wood and debris and clear space for burning and chipping piles. Circuit Riders began their part of the project, creating still more piles to be moved for burning and chipping. Our fall Americorp Team of 10 individuals (on abbreviated assignment due to other pressing Americorp needs) spent 6 days hauling tarps full of wood to the chipping area. With two days of burning, and one VERY full day of chipping, all the biomass from the private land was reduced to a few piles of char and ash and some big piles of chips. Circuit Riders will continue to chip along Harrison Grade to remove the rest of the debris from the Reserve. Here are a few pictures to give you an idea of the magnitude of the work. ![]() Give A Gift to the Landscape We Love When a small group of West County residents formed Fire Safe Occidental (FSO) in 2018 and later Safer West County (SWC) in 2019, we did so out of alarm for the fire risk to our beloved forests, communities, and individual homes. As a result of fires (compounded by the impact of COVID-19) businesses and restaurants have closed. Seasonal tourism is often halted by smoke and evacuations. Insurance costs are increasing. Public Safety Power Shutoffs are routine. All of our lives are impacted. For places where fire actually burned, it will take a long time for many to recover and centuries for trees and habitat to regrow. Our work has become more and more important and timely. Safer West County and our Fire Safe organizations in Graton, Forestville, Guerneville, Monte Rio, Camp Meeker, Occidental, Freeston, and Bodega/Bodega Bay continue to work on community education, grants to fund needed work on emergency systems and fuel reduction, and lobby for policies that reflect our changing times and that encourage forest and watershed health, stewardship, and community resiliency. We need your help to continue our work to empower our communities and protect our forests. We’re a small volunteer organization, yet have made great strides in just a few years to advocate for our area. We need your involvement as well as your financial support to do the work that involves community engagers, scientists, attorneys and other consultants to allow us to present effective arguments to government agencies and applications for grants based on facts and science. End-of-Year Donation Please consider supporting the work we do for the health of our forests and communities with an end-of-year donation to SWC. The people driving Safer West County and our local Fire Safe organizations, just like you live in these forests, do business in them, and love them. We look forward to meeting many more of you in the coming year as our small group of volunteers grows to have a greater impact on the safety and health of our communities (both human and otherwise). Donate Button Thank you for your continuing interest and support. We wish you safe and happy holidays! If you want to share this Newsletter with a friend, please use this link: Forward to a FriendWhile not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
![]() Let us know by emailing us. Copyright © 2021 Safer West County & FireSafe Groups, All rights reserved. You asked to be contacted with important Community Safety Information from Safer West County and FireSafe Groups Safer West County info@saferwestcounty.org Our mailing address is: Safer West County & FireSafe GroupsPO Box 1132Occidental, CA 95465 |
November 26, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups Newsletter 26 November 2021 ![]() Defensible Space: Managing Vegetation Beyond ‘100 Feet’ Tuesday, December 7, 2021 from 6:00-8:00 pm Learn how to reduce your wildfire risk while increasing habitat health outside the defensible space zone. Sponsored by Safer West County, Presented by Sonoma Ecology Center, and Funded by Fire Safe Sonoma. All are welcome, however workshop content will be focused on the Safer West County communities. Live Presentations via Zoom Register Here Click on the poster below for more information. Safer West County News: Free Chipping: The County will again be in the OCSD area for chipping the week of December 13th. Get your piles stacked correctly (they really do pass them by if you don’t) and sign up with David Shatkin at dshatkin@sonic.net. Go here for info on pile requirements. BioChar is a great alternative to burn piles: See our November 22 Newsletter here for more details Growing Network of Fire Safe Councils: We have councils existing and emerging in Bodega, Bodega Bay, Camp Meeker, Forestville, Freestone, Green Valley/Graton, Guerneville, Monte Rio, Occidental, and West Sebastopol—and all of them could use a little of your time or expertise to tackle the array of opportunities ahead of us to improve our fire resilience and emergency preparedness in West County. Let us know if you can help by sending us an email. Giving Tuesday: November 30th is “Giving Tuesday.” While we ask you to consider giving to Safer West County among the many requests you will get, we also want to express how grateful we are, the volunteers who make up Safer West County, for our thriving communities and for you, the people who make living here great. We hope you find our work helpful to you personally and to the specific area you live in. Please consider a donation to help fund Safer West County’s volunteer efforts and if possible consider getting involved in your local Fire Safe Council. Your donation helps us buy tools for community work days, apply for and orchestrate grants, host our website, and hold webinars. PLEASE DONATE! Fire Safe Councils News Fire Safe Occidental: FSO is initiating a reverse call system throughout Occidental as a backup to other alert systems allowing each neighborhood to have easy and quick access to notifying each other in the event of a local fire or other emergencies. Please make sure your neighborhood leader has accurate phone numbers for everyone in your household and anyone who regularly works on your property so that in the event of a local emergency you can easily be notified. More about the system coming soon…. While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
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November 22, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups Newsletter 22 November 2021 ![]() December 7 – Defensible Space Beyond 100ft Webinar: The Resilient Landscapes Coalition is holding another webinar to help us thoughtfully manage the beautiful area we live in—this time extending to the 100 feet around your home. The last webinar this group did for Safer West County was widely attended and people felt the information was extremely useful. This webinar will be equally helpful with experts Ellie Insley (Resilient Landscapes Coalition), Brock Dolman (from Occidental Arts and Ecology Center), and Mike Jones, PhD (with UC Cooperative Extension). Exact time and registration details will be announced soon. Safer West County News: Free Chipping: The County will again be in the OCSD area for chipping the week of December 13th. Get your piles stacked correctly (they really do pass them by if you don’t) and sign up with David Shatkin at dshatkin@sonic.net. Go here for info on pile requirements. BioChar is a great alternative to burn piles: Green Valley and the Resilient Landscape Collation held separate live biochar workshops the past few days. A popular topic, Biochar provides two great outcomes as a fuel reduction technique. First, much of the carbon from your limbing and trimming is sequestered into the ground rather than released into the air and second, the resulting biochar can be a wonderful additive to gardens, orchards, and landscaping when mixed with compost. We have included more info at the end of this newsletter on biochar and will keep you posted on other events when we know about them. Giving Tuesday: November 30th is “Giving Tuesday.” While we ask you to consider giving to Safer West County among the many requests you will get, we also want to express how grateful we are, the volunteers who make up Safer West County, for our thriving communities and for you, the people who make living here great. We hope you find our work helpful to you personally and to the specific area you live in. Please consider a donation to help fund Safer West County’s volunteer efforts and if possible consider getting involved in your local Fire Safe Council. Your donation helps us buy tools for community work days, apply for and orchestrate grants, host our website, and hold webinars. Your time could be the difference in Safer West County being awarded a grant to help residents do home hardening work or improvements to evacuation routes. Your work could help us bring important educational material to our community, or improve our alert systems. Whatever your finances, skills, and passions, there is a place for you to contribute to a safer and more connected West County. PLEASE DONATE! Growing Network of Fire Safe Councils: We have councils existing and emerging in Bodega, Bodega Bay, Camp Meeker, Forestville, Freestone, Green Valley/Graton, Guerneville, Monte Rio, Occidental, and West Sebastopol—and all of them could use a little of your time or expertise to tackle the array of opportunities ahead of us to improve our fire resilience and emergency preparedness in West County. Let us know if you can help by sending us an email. From PG&E: ![]() Neighborhood News: Occidental’s Neighborhood #1 (Harrison Grade)is tackling a big project (40 acres) in and around the Ecological Reserve on the west side of the street below Stoetz. Thanks to the neighborhood volunteers who came to the first work-day and made a big dent in the vegetation overgrowth! This is a complex project coordinating volunteers, CA Fish & Wildlife, Circuit Riders, County Chipping, and AmeriCorps crews. We have both public and private lands as well as a whole host of endangered species to work around. A huge challenge–but well worth the effort as the Reserve sits directly north of town and directly east of Camp Meeker. Fire Safe Councils News Fire Safe Occidental FSO is initiating a reverse call system throughout Occidental as a backup to other alert systems allowing each neighborhood to have easy and quick access to notifying each other in the event of a local fire or other emergencies. Please make sure your neighborhood leader has accurate phone numbers for everyone in your household and anyone who regularly works on your property so that in the event of a local emergency you can easily be notified. More about the system coming soon…. All About Biochar Overview Biochar is gaining recognition as a preferred alternative to pile burning for vegetation management because it reduces smoke (and carbon emissions), increases soil and forest health, and reduces scarring on the forest floor. The best part is that it’s an easy modification to traditional pile burns! What is Biochar? Bio-charcoal (Biochar) is the nearly pure carbon residue leftover after pyrolyzing woody biomass. Pyrolyzing is a fancy term that basically means cooking wood (or other biomass) in a low oxygen environment to burn off the volatile compounds and other gases. The result is similar to the charcoal briquets that you’d buy at the store for grilling. Biochar is an Ancient Technology Native Americans have been using fire to cultivate the landscapes in Sonoma County for thousands of years. In fact, indigenous peoples in both North and South America have used fire to cultivate crops, create natural fibers for baskets and clothing, and increase forage for game since time immemorial. In the Amazon River basin, terra preta (translation: black soil) has been found widely distributed near pre-Columbian settlements and, to this day ~450 years after these settlements disappeared, terra preta soils are much more fertile than other Amazonian soils, which are otherwise naturally poor. Historically, charcoal created by low intensity fires in our region was a key component to the fire-adapted plant species and increased nutrient cycling in the soil, but it has declined due to fire exclusion and suppression. Why Char Instead of Burning? Creating charcoal from woody plant debris rather than burning it to ash has a number of benefits:Less smoke and up to half the carbon emissions – In the biochar method, the gases and volatile organic compounds (VoCs) released by the biomass as it heats up are consumed by flames and burn far more cleanly than in traditional, bottom-lit pile burning. It also minimizes scarring on the land from pile burns, which burn hot close to the ground.Increases soil fertility – The exact mechanism is still being worked out, but soils with biochar increase soil cation by up to 30%. That’s a fancy way of saying it makes more soil nutrients available to plants. Microbes colonize the porous structure of the biochar and use the negative ions in the biochar to increase their metabolic rate and provide more minerals to plants.Increases water retention in the soil –Biochar’s porosity also soaks up water during rains and then slowly releases it over time. This reduces erosion and runoff and also acts as a “water bank” for plants and crops growing in those soils, which further increases drought tolerance. Great, so How Do I Make Biochar? To create bio-charcoal instead of ash, you simply need to make a few modifications to your normal pile burn:Wait until it is safe and legal to burn, typically November to April.Stack the biomass in a clear area away from structures and overhanging trees.Secure sufficient water for dousing the flames, typically one gallon per cubic foot of biomass.Biomass of similar size is best: typically no thicker than four inches in diameter and no longer than 4 feet in length. The smallest recommended size is about 3×3”. The biomass should be dried for at least a few weeks after clearance.Pile the biomass up to 4 feet in height and 4 feet in diameter like you would stack a normal pile burn.This next step is key!: Light the pile from the top. Feel free to use a fire starter to assist. By lighting from the top, the hydrocarbon and volatile gases in the wood are consumed by the flames, which reduces smoke and pollutants and results in a cooler, more controlled burn.Monitor the pile while it’s burning.Periodically add more material, as the fire allows.When the pile is reduced to coals, but before it turns to fine ash, rake them out and douse with water until the coals are cold. Think of how you rake out a campfire before going to bed; you want to be able to pick up the biochar in your hand. You can also contact Raymond Baltar with Sonoma Ecology Center with questions, rent one of their Ring of Fire biochar kilns, or request resources and assistance. Biochar reduces the volume of biomass by about 90%. What Do I Do With Biochar? If you want to use the biochar for agricultural applications or in a garden, collect the biochar and mix into compost. Recipes we’ve seen range from 1:10 or 1:2 ratio of biochar:compost depending on the pH of your soil (biochar is alkalizing). You can also soak in compost tea. For best results, let the biochar+compost or tea mixture cure for two weeks and then incorporate into your soil. Biochar is a sponge for moisture and microbes, and you want it to absorb nutrients in a compost pile before incorporating into agricultural soils. If you’re applying back into a wooded area with established trees, broadcasting the biochar over a wide area is fine. The goal is to avoid concentrating too much in any area. This mimics historical low intensity fire. Learning More Here are some resources if you’d like to learn more:Scaling Biochar: Recent conference with about 20 recordings from presenters on all things biochar.55 Uses of Biochar: Comprehensive academic article.A Farmer’s Guide to Biochar: For our agriculture community members.Biochar FAQ: All your biochar questions answered.How Biochar Works in Soil: For our soil nerds🤓. While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
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October 15, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups Newsletter 15 October 2021 ![]() Safer West County will again have an AmeriCorps team here doing defensible space work for property owners unable physically or financially to do the work themselves. Teams will use hand tools to limb tree branches up and remove ladder fuel and remove or thin vegetation close to your home. We will distribute the workdays across our communities of Bodega/Bodega Bay, Camp Meeker, Forestville, Freestone, Graton, Guerneville, Monte Rio, and Occidental. If you, or someone you know, could use help making your home more fire resilient, please email us at info@SaferWestCounty.org. We will give priority to those properties where a neighborhood project leader is available to help meet the AmeriCorps team the morning of the project and be available to answer questions during the day if the team requires support. Can You Donate Tools or Funds to Buy Tools? Last spring we outfitted 6 AmeriCorps volunteers with loppers, wheelbarrows, hand saws, rakes, and shovels. This month we will receive a team of 12 which is great news for the amount of work we can accomplish. With this comes a need for additional tools. If you have tools in good working order that you no longer use please consider cleaning out your shed and donating them to Safer West County. Or, we would greatly appreciate financial support to equip these volunteers for this important work. NOTE: These tools may be available (when not in use by our AmeriCorps volunteers) to Safer West County neighborhood groups; let us know if you want more information on this plan. To let us know how you can help or if you want to use our tools, please email us at info@SaferWestCounty.org. Resilient Landscape Webinar Follow Up We learned a lot during the webinar on how to approach landscaping for both beauty and fire resiliency. Anyone who missed it, can watch the recording on YouTube. In addition, Resilient Landscape Commission and Fire Safe Sonoma are offering two follow-up sessions. Neighborhood Tours First, we will be visiting different neighborhood properties Oct 23 or Oct 30, 10am-12pm, to discuss specific defensible space treatments to give you practical ideas of how to apply the webinar information. Communities include Bodega, Freestone, Occidental, Camp Meeker, Forestville, Guerneville, or Monte Rio. To sign up please send an email specifying your preferred date and the community you live in to: info@SaferWestCounty.org Home Hardening Defensible Space Assessor Training Second, many of you indicated an interest in becoming a home hardening and defensible space assessor. Fire Safe Sonoma will be provide this in two 3-hour trainings: October 27 5:30-8:30pm and November 3 5:30-8:30pm. For more information and to sign up: Training 1 on Oct 27: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_BY7mIMYySvyL40hdtpSx9Q Training 2 on Nov 3: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_LMR60A34SjCjC4F8TTKsZQ Report Safety Concerns to PGEPG&E has developed a mobile app, PG&E Report It, to make it easy to report non-emergency safety concerns related to PG&E electrical equipment. The app is being launched as part of a pilot. During the pilot, usage of the app will be focused on reports from customers in high fire threat areas. Look here for more information and how to sign up. Fire Safe Occidental News Roadside Fuel Reduction work We have made amazing progress along Coleman Valley and some of Joy Rd and Bittner. The team is on another project and will return the first week of November to complete work on both Bittner and Joy Rd. Staying Connected in Emergencies FSO is initiating a reverse call system throughout Occidental as a backup to other alert systems allowing each neighborhood to have easy and quick access to notifying each other in the event of a local fire or other emergencies. Please make sure your neighborhood leader has accurate phone numbers for everyone in your household and anyone who regularly works on your property so that in the event of a local emergency you can easily be notified. More about the system coming soon…. While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY ![]() Let us know by emailing us.Subscribe to Safer West County |
September 24, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups Newsletter 24 September 2021 ![]() Resilient Landscape Webinar Tuesday, September 28, 2021 6 – 8 pm Safer West County is hosting a Resilient Landscape Webinar to help you create biodiverse fire-wise landscaping with experts from the UCCE Master Gardener Program of Sonoma County, Sonoma Ecology Center, Habitat Corridor Project, and Fire Safe Sonoma. Topics covered will include: specific plant and design suggestions in the 0-5’, 5-30’, and 30-100’ defensible space zones| how to reconcile potentially conflicting goals of beauty, biodiversity, low water use, and fire resilience what it means to be sustainable in an ever-changing California climate. Sign up at the UC ANR websiteFire Extinguisher Use Wednesday, October 20, 2021 Either 10 or 11 AM Having a fire extinguisher is only half of what is needed to help keep your home safe—being able to effectively use it is the other. Join Safer West County at the Occidental Fire Station on October 20th (Wed.) at either 10 or 11 am for a must-know training on how to safely use a fire extinguisher. It could make all the difference someday. Offered for free but space is limited. Registration is required and will be confirmed on a first-come basis. Email carolynsell@gmail.com with your name, email, phone number, and choice of 10 or 11 am workshop times. Sponsored by Safer West County, Occidental Volunteer Fire Department, and Santa Rosa Fire Equipment Services. While not required, we ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50. We appreciate any and all contributions of any size. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can. Our US Mail address if you want to send a check is: Safer West County PO Box 1132 Occidental, CA 95465DONATE TODAY |
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Stay safe and keep in touch. Safer West County is always looking for people who can get involved, or ideas you may have about how we can best serve our community. Let us know by emailing us.Subscribe to Safer West County |
September 17, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups Newsletter 17 September 2021 ![]() Tuesday, September 28, 2021 6 – 8 pm How do you improve fire resiliency in the first few feet around your home and still have beautiful landscaping? Can you encourage wildlife habitat and still do defensible space work? These are just some of the questions that we will tackle in this upcoming webinar with experts from the UCCE Master Gardener Program of Sonoma County, Sonoma Ecology Center, Habitat Corridor Project, and Fire Safe Sonoma. To learn more about the webinar see the insert below and sign up on the UC ANR website PG&E Generator and Battery Rebates Did you know that PG&E offers rebates to help you purchase portable generators and backup batteries if you have medical needs or a water source that depends on electricity when the power is out? With power outages becoming a common occurrence, this could be important for you. For more information on the program, read this. To see what are qualifying products visit the PG&E website, scroll down and download the list. Volunteer Everyone has something to contribute Safer West County is an all volunteer organization. To be effective as a network we rely on the skills and talents of everyone. What are your interests and skills? What are the resources available within your friends or organization? We could use a little of your time! Let us know by emailing us. We ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50; it is not required. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can.DONATE TODAY |
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Stay safe and keep in touch. Safer West County is always looking for people who can get involved or ideas you may have about how we can best serve our community.Subscribe to Safer West County |
August 25, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups Newsletter 25 August 2021 ![]() on Roadside Fire Safety Clearing Sonoma County TPW (the Dept. of Transportation & Public Works) is providing traffic control along the roadways as Conservation Corps workers do the work associated with the grants secured to make our evacuation routes safer. The grants are focused on making changes that will last for a number of years, therefore the workers will not be clearing minor vegetation, like grasses, that are the normal responsibility of property owners. If you want support doing roadside work at your property, Fire Safe Occidental will work with TPW to coordinate extended traffic control each day after the CCNB crews are done working (approximately 2:30 pm) to allow property owners to tackle the grasses at the edge of the roadway safely. If you are interested in traffic control on your section of Coleman Valley Road, Joy Road, or Bittner, please contact Elizabeth at 1-650-796-7158 and she will work with TPW to make arrangements. Please give us as much advance notice as possible! KRCB Firecast A Useful Tool KRCB 104.9 FM is Sonoma County’s NPR Public Radio Station. They have been promoting their Firecast website, which curates a number of useful tools relating to fire all in one place. Tools include Satellite heat maps, 911 calls via PulsePoint, Live Fire Cams, Evacuations, Wind speed, weather advisories, smoke via PurpleAir, and power outages via PG&E. This can be a very convenient site for getting information. Try it out: Firecast 7 Saturdays to a More Fire-Resistant Home series As we are learning that fire season is becoming an annual event, it is important that those of us who live here find resources to be prepared, not scared. Safer West County is committed to sharing events and resources that can help you be just that—better prepared. In the link below you will find a video series from PGE that covers:Defensible Space (1-30 feet)Defensible Space (to 100 feet)3 Affordable Home Hardening ActionsEvacuation PreparationsFire Resistant LandscapingThings to do Inside Your HomeFire Resilient Communities You will find the video series here: Seven-Saturdays Even though sometimes it seems like there is so much more to do than you may have time or money to accomplish, remember: “It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius A Message Fron Watch Duty Watch Duty, a service that started two weeks ago, is asking for financial support. Please review the letter they sent Safer West County in the link below. We believe they are an important addition to the fire notification systems we have available to us and ask you to consider supporting them. Watch Duty Letter Stewarding Forests for Wildlife and Fire Resilience – SOLD OUT a Pepperwood Preserve event The original Pepperwood Preserve event scheduled for September 18 was sold out, so another was scheduled for September 26. This second event sold out just as this newsletter was about to be sent out. The workshop is to learn how to manage vegetation in different forest types, how to deal with the slash, how wildfire responds to different treatments, what is the best response to fire-killed trees, and what funding sources are available for forest stewardship. If you are interested in this type of event, we encourage you to put your name on the waiting list as it might encourage them to another. Do that here (it’s at the bottom of the web page). Let them know you want more of these events. Volunteer Everyone has something to contribute Safer West County is an all volunteer organization. To be effective as a network we rely on the skills and talents of everyone. What are your interests and skills? What are the resources available within your friends or organization? We could use a little of your time! Let us know by emailing us. We ask everyone to consider making an annual donation of $25-50; it is not required. Donations contribute to our expenses such as web hosting, bulk email services, and similar expenses. Please make a donation through our website, or by pushing the button below, if you can.DONATE TODAY |
August 9, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups THIS WEEK Alert Testing! 9 August 2021 Newsletter ![]() FEMA, FCC Conducting Tests of Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) System This Wednesday, August 11, at 11:20am, there will be a FEMA Opt-In test of the Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) System. Opt-in means you must be signed up for this specific test to receive the test alert. For information to opt-in, follow this LINK to the Advisory which has instructions for a post alert survey, and a separate instruction sheet to enable both Android and iPhone. This is a great opportunity to see if your specific phone, in your specific area will be likely to receive this type of an alert. Please feel free to share with your neighbors and friends if they are also interested. As in the past, your neighbors and you may not all get the alert, but if some do you can leverage your group network to spread the word too! Stronger together, for sure! For your convenience, if you don’t find the links in the Advisory mentioned above, you can go directly to the Instructions that guide you through the test survey process at this LINK. |
July 30, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups 30 July 2021 Newsletter ![]() to help you make your home more fire resilient Fire Safe Sonoma is doing a 3-part series on three successive Thursdays at 6 pm, August 5th, 12th & 19th, that can really help you focus on the highest priority projects you can do to protect your home from fire. The series starts with the most important step—home (structural) hardening, followed by Home Ignition Zones and Defensible Space the next two Thursdays. See these flyers for details: Home (Structural) Hardening Home Ignition Zone Defensible Space or simply register here for each event: Register for Home (Structural) Hardening Register for Home Ignition Zone Register for Defensible Space Roadside Fuel Reduction Work on Coleman Valley, Joy and Bittner Roads Has Begun ![]() This part of the work is funded by a PG&E grant to Fire Safe Sonoma that Fire Safe Occidental and Safer West County were able to obtain for our community. Wildfire Adapted Sonoma County grant-funded program If your property is in the project area shown in the map below, you are eligible for a Wildfire Adapted Sonoma County grant-funded program. Each parcel in the project area will receive a vegetation management assessment and can opt-in to receive a structure hardening assessment. See the Sonoma County Adapts website for more information. During phase 2 of the project, property owners will be able to apply for incentive funding to implement measures recommended by the assessors. Sign up to receive notification about when the incentive application period will open. For more information, please send email to: WildfireAdapted@sonoma-county.org ![]() OAEC is Reopening This Fall! Starting October 1st, 2021, Occidental Arts & Ecology Center (OAEC) will be reopening to offer Permaculture Design Courses, Garden Volunteer Days (by RSVP), the Internship Program and more! In preparation OAEC is staffing up. They will also be once again booking organizational retreats starting in October through all of 2022. See here for more details. DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() |
July 23, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups 23 July 2021 Newsletter ![]() Joy Rd/Coleman Valley Rd/Bittner Rd Roadside Fuel reduction begins July 26th!!! Work will start at Coleman Valley Rd near downtown Occidental moving along Joy Rd to Bodega Highway. (Bittner Rd will follow.) Conservation Corp North Bay crews will raise the tree canopy, remove brush and dead trees from the side of the street back 15 feet back making our evacuation routes much safer. If your property borders Coleman Valley, Joy or Bittner Roads and you have not sent Fire Safe Occidental your forms, please do so immediately so this potentially life saving work can progress smoothly. Safer West County and Fire Safe Occidental coordinated with Fire Safe Sonoma and Conservation Corp North Bay to get grants to fund the project. Sonoma County is contributing all the traffic control. Please plan on travel delays in the project area and watch the crews progress to estimate what sections might impact your travels. Opportunities for more chipping Don’t let the end of burning debris piles stop you from continuing to improve your property’s fire resiliency! The county offers free chipping to Sonoma residents; both as individual property owners and as part of Community chipping days through your Fire Safe Council. The community chipping days have limited space and are done on a first come first serve basis, so make sure you sign up early. The next Fire Safe Occidental Community days begin on August 23rd. Sign up through David Shatkin, dshatkin@sonic.net. To sign up individually with the county go directly to their website. Do you know your evacuation zone? Click here to find your zone, then make sure everyone in your household knows it (see our last newsletter for ideas on how to remember) and post your zone somewhere easy to find in the event of an emergency. Upcoming Occidental Town Hall w/ Supervisor Hopkins and other County Officials July 29, 6pm – 7:30pm Next Thursday, July 29th, from 6 – 7:30 pm is the Occidental (and surrounding areas) time to bring your questions to Supervisor Lynda Hopkins and other County officials. They are coming prepared to discuss the issues that matter to you—so plan to attend. Here are the details: The meeting will be held on Zoom and on Facebook live, see links below. After the event, videos are available both on Facebook and on YouTube. YouTube Channel can be found under Sonoma County 5th District. Please click the link below to join the webinar: https://sonomacounty.zoom.us/j/91478946822?pwd=cjYvcjhiTlVqUHRFdlZlckhlSkJmQT09 Passcode: 455878 Or One tap mobile: US: +16699009128,,91478946822# or +12532158782,,91478946822# Or Streaming Facebook Live – Supervisor Lynda Hopkins https://www.facebook.com/supervisorlyndahopkins/ You will hear from and be able to ask questions of the following people who are planning to update the community on these topics prior to Q&A: • Supervisor Lynda Hopkins • Occidental/Graton Sanitation update (sewer) with Mike Thompson, Assistant General Manager of the Sonoma County Water Agency • Parking and Road issues with Johannes Hoevertsz, Director of Transportation and Public Works • Parking • One-way street proposal • Temporary structures • Use of road yard for events • Community Center status with David Robinson, Parks Manager for Regional Parks • Matching grant program for local park/bathrooms, Ag + Open Space • Fire Preparedness including • Drought impact of fire preparations • Evacuation routes (Joy Rd, Willow Creek,…) • Microgrid • Alerts and Communications • Ensuring Fire mitigation does not become a free ticket to logging • Homeless/transient fires in forests • Cannabis issues • Followed by Q&A and Announcements DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() |
July 18, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups July 18, 2021 Newsletter Update ![]() CANCELLED NOAA Weather Radio Owners Countywide Alert Test Due to the fire weather concerns in the North Bay Mountains and the greater Bay Area, the City of Santa Rosa, County of Sonoma, and the National Weather Service Bay Area have decided to CANCEL the emergency alert and warning exercise originally scheduled for Tuesday, July 20. This exercise would have included a NOAA Weather Radio warning alarm system test and a SoCoAlert test in a targeted geographical area in the City of Santa Rosa. This alert and warning exercise will be rescheduled to a later date. The National Weather Service has elevated the original Fire Weather Watch to a Red Flag Warning for the North Bay Mountains and upper elevations of Sonoma County from Sunday at 5 PM to Monday afternoon. The warning is based on a chance for dry lightning Sunday into Monday. The potential thunderstorms will be a mix of dry and wet, but given how dry the fuels are, any lightning strikes will be problematic. The threat for thunderstorms diminishes Monday afternoon as the moisture moves northward. The City of Santa Rosa has plans to upstaff additional firefighters and emergency operations needs. This is being done out of an abundance of caution to ensure we are prepared for weather or fire-related type incidents. WIND: Given the potentially dry nature of thunderstorms gusty and erratic winds will be possible with developed storms. TIMING: Thunderstorm threat most likely late Sunday afternoon through early Monday afternoon. LIGHTNING: Isolated to scattered dry thunderstorms will be possible Sunday afternoon through early Monday afternoon. IMPACTS: Given the dry fuels over the higher elevations, any cloud-to-ground lightning strikes have the potential of starting new wildfires.___ Remember, stay alert during all Red Flag days. Refrain from ALL activities that can cause sparks from outdoor flames of any kind, or the use of power tools with metal parts that will cause sparks when they strike a hard object. DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() |
July 16, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups July 2021 Newsletter ![]() NOAA Weather Radio Owners Countywide Alert Test The County of Sonoma, City of Santa Rosa, and the National Weather Service Bay Area will conduct an emergency alert and warning exercise comprised of two individual tests on July 20. The effort includes a countywide test of the NOAA Weather Radio warning alarm system as well as a targeted test to Santa Rosa area residents of a text message, email and/or phone call alert test. The first test, at about noon on July 20, is a test emergency message broadcast to all NOAA Weather Radios (NWR) throughout Sonoma County. The NWR warning alarm will sound one time, then be followed by a short test message, and then a closing alarm tone. This test message will be transmitted as a Civil Emergency Message and the words “Civil Emergency Message” may scroll across the NWR displays of compatible radios. The NWR test cycle will play through only one time. NWR owners in Safer West County areas should note that Civil Emergency Message alerts are always on, and can’t be turned off, on Midland and Sangean NWRs typically used in the Safer West County area. Thus you will hear this alert test on your NWR. Do not be alarmed, it is a test. You can read more details here in English and Spanish. 3 Fires – One avoidable cause! This past weekend alone there were 3 fires in the county –luckily all kept small –caused by afternoon mowing during the heat of the day. Please remember not to mow after 10 o’clock in the morning and please take advantage of the morning fog while the humidity is up and always have a water source or a fire extinguisher while conducting your mowing operation. “A son (for me) and for G, too,” or remembering your evacuation zone It’s one thing to Know Your Zone, but how are you going to remember it when it counts? You can — and should — write it down and keep it somewhere for easy reference, like on the front of the refrigerator, or next to your phone charger. But how will you remember it accurately when an alert comes in when you’re standing in line at the grocery store? In that case, a mnemonic can make it easier for your freaked-out brain to remember the random series of letters and numbers that just might save your life. Mnemonics work by imposing structure on random sequences or bits of information to make them more memorable. Acronyms like ROYGBIV, for example, make it easier to remember the colors in a rainbow, and rhymes like the one that begins “30 days hath September” make it easier to remember how many days in each month. Likewise, a phrase such as the one above which recasts zone SON-4G2 as “a son (for me) and for G, too,” can make it easier to remember your evacuation zone when there’s no room for doubt. What’s your approach to remembering your evacuation zone? Share your strategy for remembering your zone for a chance to win a go-bag. One winner will be drawn at random and announced in the August newsletter, along with all helpful suggestions that we receive. Lessening the effects of the drought on your land Here is an article written by an Occidental resident and arborist, Marc Dunia, who has been working with our redwood forests for decades that can help you think through how to help your landscape survive the drought: Mulch to the Rescue Safer West County and Fire Safe Occidental in the News… This recent article in SoCoNews describes some of the ways our two organizations are helping you and your neighbors. Evacuation Drill results Fire Safe Occidental (FSO) and Fire Safe Camp Meeker (FSCM), in coordination with the Sonoma County Department of Emergency Management participated in an evacuation drill on June 19. About 188 people signed up on the county website to participate, and over 200 people actually participated. We are awaiting the results from 207 people who responded to the county survey that followed the drill. The most concerning outcome of the drill was poor communication and drill alerts by the county Emergency Management Department and the county Sheriff Department. Many residents who signed up with the county did not receive the SoCo Alert transmission, and many did not hear the sheriffs’ hi-lo sirens as they drove around the Occidental area. In addition, the siren at the Occidental fire station, which was supposed to have been set off by around 9 a.m., did not go off and had to be manually operated by Chief Ron Lunardi. Both FSO and FSCM are awaiting the results of the after-drill survey and will continue to press the county to improve their communications and future evacuation drills. Upcoming Occidental Town Hall w/ Supervisor Hopkins July 29, 6pm – 7:30pm Please join a virtual town hall with Lynda Hopkins as well as other County officials to answer questions Occidental residents may have. Topics will include downtown parking, community center, public bathrooms, fire preparedness, and more. Occidental Town Hall – Thursday, July 29, 6pm – 7:30pm The meeting will be held on Zoom and on Facebook live, links below. After the event, videos are available both on Facebook and on YouTube. YouTube Channel can be found under Sonoma County 5th District. Please click the link below to join the webinar: https://sonomacounty.zoom.us/j/91478946822?pwd=cjYvcjhiTlVqUHRFdlZlckhlSkJmQT09 Passcode: 455878 Or One tap mobile: US: +16699009128,,91478946822# or +12532158782,,91478946822# Or Streaming Facebook Live – Supervisor Lynda Hopkins https://www.facebook.com/supervisorlyndahopkins/ DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() |
May 29, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups June 2021 Newsletter ![]() Sonoma County Department of Emergency Management, in conjunction with Fire Safe Occidental (FSO), Fire Safe Camp Meeker (FSCM) and Safer West County (SWC) will hold an evacuation drill on June 19th, to practice evacuating our homes and communities in the event of an “immediate” evacuation (i.e. an evacuation in response to a nearby, rapidly-building, wind-driven, take your family and run, wildfire.) The drill area includes Camp Meeker and Occidental. The county will mail drill information to residents of Camp Meeker and most of the Occidental Community Services District (OCSD). Due to Sheriff Department limitations, some OCSD residents will not receive a postcard message, but we are encouraging everyone to sign up for the alerts and to participate. To sign up go to the June 19 Evacuation Drill web page. Then click on “+ Camp Meeker/Occidental Saturday, June 19th” and use the Registration button. To provide both the county and our community with a more realistic evacuation experience, we hope that at least one person from each household participates in the drill. We want this drill to familiarize everyone with egress routes and help Emergency Management assess their ability to support the swift safe evacuation of people, pets, and livestock. Around 9 am on June 19th, county sheriffs will drive through the drill areas with Hi-Lo sirens, and the Occidental Volunteer Fire Department will sound their siren–alerting people to immediately evacuate. These sirens indicate the start of the drill. NOTE: In an actual disaster you can dial 211 to get a list of shelters including those for special needs. New Evacuation Zones New Evacuation Zones have been announced by the county. To find your zone, and make sure everyone in your family knows which zone you are in, go to the Know Your Zone web page. On this page Use The Zone Lookup Tool to Enter your Address and you will be given your zone name. Save this for future use in emergencies and Use the County’s interactive Evacuation Zone Map to see where boundaries are. If you are not already signed up for SoCoAlert and Nixle, please click on Sign Up for Alerts on the upper right of this web page. Shout out to Catholic Charities CYO camp A special shout out to Catholic Charities CYO for their recent fuel reduction work. Over the past 5 weekends, crews have removed and chipped ladder fuel around their large water tank that serves southern Occidental and their camp, plus the area along their internal roads that might provide secondary egress for the community along Mara and Bittner Roads. ![]() ![]() Planning a neighborhood work party? SWC has hand tools available for neighborhood groups to do volunteer days. We have loppers, hand saws, clippers, rakes, pole saws, sapling pullers, tarps and much more. Our only requirement is that they are returned cleaned, sharpened, and in good working order. Your neighborhood leader should contact us at carolynsell@gmail.com for to arrange using them. Coalition of Camps and Large property owners along Bohemian Highway Recently, Safer West County collaborated with a group of large parcel owners from Monte Rio to Freestone to improve this important evacuation corridor and create defensible space and fuel break areas for firefighters should they need to protect our communities within the surrounding forests. The effort culminated in grant applications to fund significant fuel reduction projects and has also resulted in a long-term coalition with new members joining the strategic and tactical discussion of how to improve our forest and community resilience now and in the years to come. We are very grateful for the initial participants who hold more than 2600 acres in our area: ● Alliance Redwoods Conference Grounds ● Bohemia Ecological Preserve ● Bohemia Preserve, LLC ● Camp Meeker Recreation and Park District ● CYO Camp (Catholic Charities of San Francisco) ● Green Valley Farm and Mill ● Harmony School District ● Mighty Arrow Ranch, LLC ● Monte Rio Recreation and Park District ● Mt. Gilead Bible Camp and Conference Center (youth camps and conferences) ● Sowing Circle, LLC/Occidental Arts and Ecology Center (educational center) ● St. Dorothy’s Episcopal Camp and Retreat Center (youth camps and conferences) ● Two Sisters Place (private residence) ● Westminster Woods (youth camps and conferences) The collaborative process and grant application was hugely supported by Fire Safe Sonoma, Goldridge RCD, Circuit Riders, and Conservation Corp North Bay, as well as local CAL FIRE and Fire Chiefs from Monte Rio, Graton, Occidental, and Goldridge. Fire Safe Occidental News Residents of Joy, Bittner, Deer Meadow and Willow Creek roads ~ We just learned of a County home hardening and defensible space funding program which is open to individuals on these roads. This is the first such program we have seen which is targeting individual property owners. Please study the map on the SoCOAdapts web page by clicking on the Sonoma County Wildfire Adapted Project Area Map Viewer to determine if you are in the selected area. The map is detailed enough to see individual parcels if you zoom in. We highly encourage all of you to apply if you are eligible. Cost is one of the huge elements holding many of us back from increasing the safety of our homes. This project is aimed to assist! County free chipping will resume in Occidental this month. Please make sure you have applied for chipping by emailing dshatkin@sonic.net, so we can help facilitate properties close to each other and improve efficiency (and hence number of days we get help!) DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() |
May 9, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups Newsletter May 9, 2021 ![]() Save the date! June 19th! Fire Safe Occidental and Fire Safe Camp Meeker members have been meeting with County officials for the last year to arrange an evacuation drill for our area. The date has been confirmed. Details are still being worked out and more information will be available very soon. Watch for a special edition of the newsletter covering all you need to know and special mailings from the County. We hope you will all participate and both learn from the experience and teach the county where our traffic hot spots will be in the case of a true immediate evacuation order! End of Burn Pile permits on May 10th (this coming Monday) Chief Lunardi shared with Safer West County that the increasing fire danger posed by dead grass and hotter, drier conditions in the region is prompting CAL FIRE to suspend all burn permits for outdoor residential burning within the State Responsibility Areas of Sonoma, Lake, Napa, Solano, Yolo and Colusa counties. This suspension takes effect Monday May 10th, 2021 and bans all residential outdoor burning of landscape debris such as branches and leaves. For more details of the CALfire notice go to our Nextdoor post. Even though you can’t burn you can get FREE Chipping. Gratefully there are piles all around our area that show how hard some of you are working at creating a safer community! Thank you! These piles can be handled quickly through BAAQ grant with Davey Trees. You can apply for FREE chipping here. Just fill out the application and also let Safer West County know you have applied by emailing dshatkin@sonic.net, so we can help facilitate logistics for properties close to each other and improve efficiency (and hence number of days we get help!) ![]() SWC has tools available for neighborhood groups to use for volunteer workdays. As part of organizing our AmeriCorps team, Safer West County purchased hand tools which are now available for neighborhood groups to borrow. We have loppers, hand saws, clippers, rakes, pole saws, sapling pullers, tarps and much more. Our only requirement is that they are returned cleaned, sharpened and in good order. Let us know what you are doing…. here is what some neighborhoods have been doing: Neighborhood # 2 (Dupont) planned a workday to help a resident who just had a stroke. One neighbor offered to pay for a weed-whacking session on the property, and this was carried out prior to a rainy burn-day. The same generous neighbor did a dump run with non-burnable debris. This community has a wonderful closeness and willingness to help each other, and this is a great example of their caring. It’s a beautiful sight to see neighbors are helping neighbors! Neighborhood # 13 (Bittner and Marra) has started monthly shared workdays. The May workday saw six people helping a neighbor with some physical challenges get inches of duff removed from the area around her water tanks, along with some limbing-up and small tree removal. We also cleared vegetation from around and under her deck. We’re looking forward to our June workday and even more participation from the neighborhood. TWO NEW GRANTS HAVE BEEN AWARDED! Work will start early this summer on roadways around Occidental thanks to two grants that have been awarded Fire Safe Occidental & Safer West County for evacuation roadway clearing. The Conservation Corp of the North Bay will be clearing roadside vegetation back to the full distance allowed by the County easement along stretches of Joy Rd, BittnerRd, and Coleman Valley Rd. The County normally limits their clearing to 5’ from the roadway. Many easements are a full 15’. When CCNB takes down the dead trees, clears ladder fuels and limbs up trees 15’ on either side of the roadway, we will have safer roads for evacuation and approximately 45’ of shaded fuel break on our these roads! Information will be sent out to the property owners along the roadways in the next few weeks. Please send the forms back quickly so we can get started as soon as nesting season allows. DONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() |
May 1, 2021
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups News Update May 1, 2021 ![]() Chief Lunardi of the Occidental Volunteer Fire Department has passed on word from Cal Fire that it’s likely that we have one week from this Monday to complete burning any burn piles this year. As of today, May 1st, 2021, the annual requirement for CAL FIRE burn permits to conduct open burning begins. Burn permits can still be obtained from Cal Fire at burnpermit.fire.ca.gov. It is most likely that burn permit suspension in our area will begin on Monday May 10th. For piles no larger than 4’x4’, an applicant can go online and watch a video and print their permit. For larger piles or broadcast burns an inspection will be required before a permit is issued. Note, that you also need your local air-quality control district permit in addition to the CalFire permit. The Air-Quality permits expired 3/30 and, if you have not yet done so, you need to renew your permit before you can burn: NoSoCoAir.net for the Northern Sonoma district. This permit is $30 plus a small fee. Note that burn hours have changed to 6:00am to 12 noon. ![]() Although the County chipping crew will not be back in our area until June, we found another opportunity for you to get free chipping done. Davey Trees is doing the work under a grant from Bay Area Air Quality. If you have chipping piles ready to chip, contact David Shatkin for more details: dshatkin@sonic.net Please support Safer West CountyDONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() |
April 27, 2021
SaferWestCounty FireSafeGroups April27,2021 Newsletter
SaferWestCountyNews
Safer West County and your local Fire Safe Councils have been busy working towards a safer community for you. This work is done completely by volunteers and we welcome you to join us in any capacity large or small based on your “prior life” experience or just what you are passionate about.
We are writing grants, networking with State, County, and other public and private organizations, working on creating local microgrids, creating educational and community outreach material, and investigating best practices on anything from radio communications to forest health, and more.
Join us. You will make wonderful friends and contribute to the area you love becoming a more resilient community.
Chippingw/DaveyTrees
Although the County chipping crew will not be back in our area until June, we found another opportunity for you to get free chipping done. Davey Trees is doing the work under a grant from Bay Area Air Quality.
If you have chipping piles ready to chip, contact
DavidShatkinfor more details:
Americorp
We have been so grateful to the work our AmeriCorps team has done at a dozen of our homes in Freestone and Occidental. The crew was pulled away to work at vaccination sites and will return briefly next week for a few more days work.
If you requested work and haven’t been scheduled, we may not get to you this round. However, Safer West County is actively applying for more crews to join us when we can get them.
In the meantime, if you have the resources to pay for a crew, we recommend you contact Circuit Riders (www.circuitriders.org) who will not only send an
equipped crew but their program is also training an expanding workforce at the same time so we have people in our community who understand defensible space and fire mitigation landscape work and requirements.
SonomaCountyPreparationsforFireSeasonWorkshop
Just in case you haven’t seen this, there are a series of fire prep workshops on the community wildfire protection plan for Sonoma. District 5 is being covered on May 6th. Here is the link to the meeting and registration, should you want to participate.
Supervisorial District #5 Wildfire Protection Plan Public Input Workshop
March 26, 2021 |
Safer West County Fire Safe Groups March 26, 2021 Newsletter ![]() making West County a little bit safer, one home at a time! The past two weeks, 7 homes in West County became a little safer for some of our neighbors. Safer West County equipped five AmeriCorps volunteers with pruners, loppers, rakes, pole saws, bow saws, hard hats, and a wheelbarrow and these volunteers cleared gutters, removed dead debris, moved firewood, and tall plants extending into roof and soffits as well as limbed lower tree branches. Our community will reap rewards from this effort long after the next 9 weeks of work and our goal is to help landowners who cannot do the work themselves and do not have the means to hire help to do it. As you know, structures can burn from falling embers igniting things close to our homes even when a wildfire has not reached the area. This is often a bigger risk to our neighborhoods during high wind fires than the front of the wildfire reaching us. That’s why ensuring all our homes are less likely to catch fire is really important. You can learn more about how to improve your home here. One of our first AmeriCorp jobs was to clear massive amounts of vegetation immediately adjacent to a home in Neighborhood #1 for a 94-year-old resident. The Neighborhood Pod Leader not only supervised but stayed for most of the day and helped the crew, as did a second resident. Other neighbors also came by to thank the crew and admire their work. We took numerous truckloads of plant debris to an already large pile in an open pasture. The Neighborhood Leader bought a burn permit for the resident, and we will have our first post-covid get-together in April—a wiener-roast and potluck over burning dried vegetation. Read to the bottom to see pictures from last week’s efforts and comments from the volunteers and neighbors.Hire a team to help with your defensible space and fire mitigation efforts. We have much more work in our community than will be done by the AmeriCorps volunteers so Safer West County is fortunate to be able to team up with an amazing organization, Circuit Riders (a non-profit), that can not only help you do the work, but is training a group of local youth to be our resource for years to come. You can get help today by contacting Circuit Riders – click here for details – or see below for more Bird nesting – March 1 to August 31 As you move into action on your land, remember to care for our flying friends. Here is a great resource from the Golden Gate Audubon Society on tree care and bird safety: https://goldengateaudubon.org/conservation/make-the-city-safe-for-wildlife/tree-care-and-bird-safety/ …and laws protecting birds : https://goldengateaudubon.org/conservation/make-the-city-safe-for-wildlife/tree-care-and-bird-safety/laws-protecting-birds/ Note: Quail nest on the ground in shallow depressions, and also need protecting. According to Cornell Labs, a preeminent source of bird research, “Female California Quail typically hide their nests on the ground amid grasses or at the bases of shrubs or trees. The nest is usually a shallow depression lined with stems and grasses, and often placed near vegetation or rocks for protection. Nests range from 5-7 inches across and 1-2 inches deep.” Chipping Free chipping continues in West county both through the Sonoma County program and Davey Trees for Bay Area Air Quality. If you are ready for help, please contact your Fire Safe Council or email David Shatkin for details dshatkin@sonic.net Experiences from the First Week of AmeriCorps Defensible Space Work Here are samplings of some the critical defensible space projects our AmeriCorps team completed the past few weeks on Lauri Ln, Harrison Grade Place, Bohemian Hwy, Facendini Ln, Joy Ridge, Dear Meadow Ln, Harmony Village, Morelli Ln, and Joy Rd. 1. We found large amounts of lumber and firewood close to houses. Our team moved and stacked it away from structures. ![]() ![]() 2. Lots of landscaping near homes was growing up into the eaves often with dead branches and our team trimmed the plants based on the owner’s instructions. ![]() ![]() 3. Removing the amount of vegetation right next to the houses. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 4. Clearing around propane tanks was another important task at many homes. ![]() ![]() We are still accepting applications for the wonderful service this AmeriCorps team is doing. Comments Made the First Week of AmeriCorps Defensible Space Work – “The Americorp workers did a very good job, worked very hard, and were a friendly group.” Freestone landowner – “It has been very gratifying to help people so far in my experience with safer west county. The residents have been so incredibly appreciative of our volunteer work.” -Jake Heil – “So far working with Safer West County has been such a fulfilling experience. Being able to interact with homeowners and community members allows for us to create a connection with those we are serving. On top of all of that–seeing neighbors come out to help at the properties we are serving shows what incredible people you all have in your communities.” – Kelly Saldarriaga – “Everyone of Safer West County has been extremely helpful in guiding us through our first week. The residents as well as their neighbors and friends have also been appreciative and welcoming to the team. They have provided help with tools, guidance, and manual labor.” – Sheyla Gonzalez – “Working with Safter West County has been my favorite project work since the beginning of my time with AmeriCorps. The people we have worked with have been nothing but grateful about the work we’re doing.” – Daniel Cantrell – “Everyone we have worked with through Safer West County has been extremely generous and helpful.” – Joseph Davis Circuit Rider Community Services ![]() Fire Safe Occidental Fire Safe Occidental was awarded Best Fire Preparedness Service in Sonoma County! Thanks to everyone who voted for us and gave us this honor! Please support Safer West CountyDONATE TODAY ![]() ![]() |
Stay safe and keep in touch. Safer West County is always looking for people who can get involved or ideas you may have about how we can best serve our community.Subscribe to Safer West County |