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Olympic Peninsula Wildfire Hazard and Wildland-Urban Interface Study
NEW! PUBLIC COMMENT NOW OPEN FOR CLALLAM COUNTY CWPP! Fire service professionals and agencies from across Clallam County have completed a draft Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) for the County. This plan designates areas of human development that are "at-risk" of catastrophic losses in the event of wildfire, and provides potential mitigation solutions. A completed CWPP will allow regional fire service agencies to compete for grants that reduce wildfire hazard. Public meetings will be held in Sequim, Port Angeles, and Forks during November 2009 to gather public input on the plan: Tuesday, November 10th: eastern Clallam County, Sequim Public Library, 3:30-5:00 Thursday, November 12th: western Clallam County, WA Department of Natural Resources, 411 Tillicum Lane, Forks, 6:00-7:30 Monday, November 23th: central Clallam County, Port Angeles Public Library, 6:00-7:30 We will also accept emails to provide input until November 23th; email your comments to Dwight Barry. Below is the Draft CWPP available for download: Clallam County DRAFT Community Wildfire Protection Plan. (6.7Mb pdf file)
The Wildland-Urban Interface of Clallam and Jefferson Counties (Note: maps and map details may take a moment to load)
Only seldom is "wildfire" used in the same context as regrowth, renewal, or even the idea of "natural." But fire is a normal and essential part of many forest ecosystems, including those of the north Olympic Peninsula, and living in this area demands an understanding of fire as an ecological process. Every summer, the Olympic Peninsula experiences dozens of small wildfires, and every few decades we experience larger ones.
Increases in the number of homes being built within our region's wildlands--an area that firefighters call the Wildland-Urban Interface--create urgency in defining the responsibility and interactions of humans within these fire-prone landscapes. In nature, fire is a force of renewal. In neighborhoods, fire can destroy homes and lives, endanger firefighters, and adversely affect our quality of life. In our quest to be closer to and more a part of nature, we have pushed into wildland areas, areas shaped by fire. With our presence and our investments at stake, protecting the homestead becomes a priority. With adequate forethought and proper preparations, we can adapt to changes in our environment. Living in the interface between the forest and developed land evokes a new set of rules and methods of thinking of our place in nature. Do you live in an area with higher hazard ratings? Scroll down or jump to links to Google Earth files that you can open and search for your location.
Areas of Highest Relative Wildfire Hazard within Clallam and Jefferson Counties
A recent study by Headwaters Economics found that Clallam County has the highest existing risk of catastrophic losses in the event of a major wildfire in all of Washington and is fifth highest among all 413 counties of the 11 states of the western United States. Jefferson County is ranked 58th in the West in the same study. The study also ranks Clallam County second in Washington and twenty-fifth in the counties of the western states for potential future risk as the result of increasing human development in wildfire-prone native ecosystems, an area that firefighters call the wildland-urban interface (WUI).
Since 2007, Peninsula College and Western Washington University-Port Angeles faculty and students have teamed up with fire service agencies and professionals from Clallam and Jefferson Counties to study this hazard in more detail, evaluate current conditions, and determine what we can all do--firefighters, policy-makers, and homeowners alike--to reduce this hazard and create safer communities. The following publications and map files provide maps, more information on our study, and ideas on what you can do to reduce the chances of your losing your home to wildland fires. They also suggest things that policy-makers could use to improve codes and make our region safer for all of us: wildlife, forests, property, and people.
Wildfire Hazard Assessment and the Wildland-Urban Interface of the North Olympic Peninsula, Washington (2009) This atlas presents the results of a geographical assessment of wildfire hazard for the north Olympic Peninsula (Jefferson and Clallam Counties), combining the relative hazards important to wildland fire behavior during the fire season to derive monthly maps of wildfire hazard. We have also created maps delineating the WUI for Clallam and Jefferson Counties based on existing structural development that intersect with areas of wildland vegetation. These maps can be useful for hazard mitigation, planning, and education efforts by showing the relative levels of wildfire hazard across the Peninsula. Print version (15.5mb) Web version (5.5mb)
Wildfire on the Peninsula: An Assessment of Hazard, Risk, and Mitigation Opportunities in Eastern Clallam County (2008) How do we
maintain the amenities of our region’s natural beauty
and minimize the risk of a wildfire disaster? A group
of students, college faculty, and emergency management
personnel decided to start addressing this issue
together in the fall of 2007; the results of our initial
study are contained in this report. In short, we found
that there are many things that we can do, as individual
landowners and as governmental entities, which can alleviate
existing risk, mitigate existing and future
hazards, and still help maintain the pleasures
that come with living in a beautiful rural area.
While fire scientists, emergency personnel, and
residents will continue to assess risk and plan
for mitigation, homeowners can start now to do
whatever they can to reduce hazards on their
properties to minimize the chances that their
homes will ignite in the event of a wildfire. We
hope that this report can serve as the basis for Print version (19.2mb) Web version (5.5mb)
Resources to Help You Protect Your HomeFirewise Communities The Firewise Communities website contains a wide variety of information on what you can do to make your home and property wildfire safe. Take a Virtual Tour of a Firewise Home Interactive Tool for Preparing Your Property for Wildland Fire Season
Explore your neighborhood: Google Earth map files
How to: If you do not already have Google Earth installed, you will need to download and install it. Google Earth is free software, and is available at earth.google.com/download-earth.html. Once you have installed it, you can view these wildfire hazard and WUI map files (below) on your computer. To see where your house is in relation to these map results, click on the file name you are interested in exploring and select "Open with" Google Earth.
Once the Google Earth opens and the map file loads, type in your street address and zip code in the upper left "Fly to" bar under the Search box, such as "1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., 98362" (the address for Peninsula College's Port Angeles campus, and Google Earth will zoom in to that location.
This is the same map as the first map (above), but also contains information about the WUI as well as web links for more information.
This is the same map as the second map (above), but also contains information about how the map was created and links for more information. For details on the following three map files (below) and how they were created, please see Wildfire Hazard Assessment and the Wildland-Urban Interfaceof the North Olympic Peninsula, Washington (web-optimized .pdf file, 5.5mb).
Other Website Resources Washington DNR Fire Prevention Assistance Information & Prevention Clallam County Fire District 3
Useful Code References If you are concerned with increasing development also increasing the risk of catastrophic loss in the event of a wildfire, suggest to your city council or county commissioner that your area adopt codes that really work in making our communities safer, helping firefighters better protect lives and property. The following references provide examples of codes used throughout the United States to reduce risks and hazards in the wildland-urban interface for firefighters and residents alike. ICC. 2006. International Wildland-Urban Interface Code. Washington, DC: International Code Council. NFPA. 2008. Standard for Fire Protection Infrastructure for Land Development in Suburban and Rural Areas. NFPA 1141. Quincy Park, MA: National Fire Protection Association. NFPA. 2008. Standard for Protection of Life and Property from Wildfire. NFPA 1144. Quincy Park, MA: National Fire Protection Association.
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