Hayley Smith, LOS ANGELES TIMES
A bill that sought to overhaul California’s system for wildfire hazard mapping has died in the state Assembly.
A bill that sought to overhaul California’s system for wildfire hazard mapping has died in the state Assembly.
Senate Bill 610, introduced in June by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), sparked heated debate over its plan to eliminate the decades-old system of ranking state and local lands as “moderate,” “high” or “very high” fire hazard severity zones — designations that influence development patterns and building safety standards based on an area’s probability of burning.
The plan instead would have empowered California’s state fire marshal, Daniel Berlant, to create a single “wildfire mitigation area” classification for California, which supporters said would simplify the system and create a uniform set of standards for wildfire preparation and mitigation.
Read more at https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2024-08-17/bill-to-abolish-california-fire-hazard-rankings-dies