By Teri Shore, Sonoma Group Chair
I heard Professor Gregory Simon on KPFA radio talking about his book Flame and Fortune in the American West as I was evacuating to my sister’s in Petaluma due to smoke and encroaching fire near my home in Sonoma Valley. The interview got my attention as Simon explained that firestorms are not entirely due to overgrown brush, drought or a hotter climate. The devastating fires that ravage communities and the landscape are also a direct result of where and how we build, why, and the influence of underlying politics, planning and profitmaking. His book has helped me start to make sense and talk about what happened here.
In “Flame and Fortune,” Simon uses the Tunnel Fire that ravaged the Oakland Hills in 1991 as a case study to explore the complex history, crisis and aftermath of fires that sweep in from the urban edge. Simon was a teenager home alone when that fire forced him to flee with whatever he could grab. His family home survived though everything around it burned.
Simon, a professor of geology and environmental sciences at University of Colorado, Denver, delves into the “complex social and environmental underpinnings” of fire on the urban edge. He reframes the wildland-urban interface as the affluence-vulnerability interface to describe how lucrative development in the hills gets prominence over fire risk. Building flammable homes in steep canyons and fire-prone landscapes creates a manmade “incendiary.”
After a fire, Simon points out that the rush to rebuild by fast-tracking design review and building permits, like we are seeing in Sonoma County, can lead to inadequate oversight of rebuilt structures and homes that are bigger and hold a higher fire risk in the long term. He explains how property tax revenues and the related impacts of California’s Proposition 13 factor into the rush to rebuild.
Simon also recognizes that fire-prone neighborhoods will be, and need to be, rebuilt and gives examples where homeowners banded together to get power lines put underground to reduce fire risk. He supports urban growth boundaries and greenbelts as good policies to keep people out of fire zones.
As soon as I started reading the book, I recognized that we needed to bring him to Sonoma County to help us understand what had happened, what to watch out for, and talk about as we recover and rebuild.
Simon recently toured some of the burn areas with Sierra Club and Greenbelt Alliance leaders, then presented his book during a brown bag session with about 30 environmental leaders, city and county officials, architects, housing advocates and community leaders. He returns to Santa Rosa on Saturday, March 10 at 7 p.m. for a free, public event at Copperfield’s Books at Montgomery Village.