A8 OREGON East Oregonian Tuesday, November 24, 2020 Plans to address huge fi res have gotten smaller By TED SICKINGER The Oregonian SALEM — Despite the devastation wrought by Ore- gon’s Labor Day fi res, Gov. Kate Brown has scaled back her ambitions when it comes to addressing the state’s wildfi re risks — in the near term at least. A legislative concept being circulated by the gov- ernor’s offi ce for a potential special session would spend nearly $50 million over the next two-year budget cycle to develop a compre- hensive wildfi re risk map, bolster fi refi ghting capac- ity and target tree thinning and fuel-reduction projects in forests identifi ed as high risk. But the legislation backs away from some of the ele- ments included in a more comprehensive bill intro- duced last year that sought new building codes for local governments requir- ing new construction to be more fi re-resistant — a move many West Coast states have pursued and that many experts believe is the most effective way to reduce those risks. Brown’s proposal for a special ses- sion also backs away from forcing utilities to adopt wildfi re risk reduction stan- dards or directing insurance companies to build wildfi re risk into their underwriting standards. Each of those elements was included in legislation introduced in early 2020, though the bill was watered down by lawmakers and lob- byists, and ultimately died when Republicans walked out of the session. Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Ash- Andy Nelson/Eugene Register-Guard, File Workers clean up at the Finn Rock Landing on the McKenzie River near Finn Rock on Sept. 15, 2020, eight days after the Holiday Farm Fire swept through the area. The landing is a popular spot for rafters to begin their fl oat trips down the McKenzie River. land, who chaired the Ore- gon Legislature’s commit- tee on Wildfi re Reduction and Recovery, called the governor’s concept “Senate Bill 1536-light,” referring to the more comprehensive bill that died earlier this year. He said many of the com- plicated and controversial elements had been stripped out for a bill that could pass during a special session, though he’s still interested in tweaking the concept if a session occurs. “If there is going to be a bill it’s going to be sim- pler and not take on the big fi ghts,” he said. “If it hap- pens, we’ll be in there for a day, and (a more compre- hensive bill) just doesn’t work.” The legislative concept sticks with the same three- prong approach presented to lawmakers in Senate Bill 1536, which was based on November 2019 recom- mendations from the Gov- ernor’s Council on Wildfi re Response. It would spend nearly $50 million from the state general fund on com- munity preparedness, bol- stering fi refi ghting capac- ity, and mitigation through investments in thinning and cleaning debris from forest fl oors. The bill would direct $8 million to $10 million to several measures promot- ing “fi re-adapted commu- nities.” It calls on the Ore- gon Department of Forestry to develop a comprehensive map of wildfi re risk by Feb- ruary 2021. It also directs the State Fire Marshal to estab- lish minimum defensible space requirements around homes and communities in wildfi re prone areas, with those standards to be admin- istered and enforced by local governments. And it directs the Oregon Health Author- ity to establish a program to increase the availability of smoke fi ltration systems for vulnerable populations in areas susceptible to wildfi re. While the concept does not include any new build- ing code requirements to make homes more fi re resis- tant, it does call for the cre- ation of a workgroup to identify building code gaps and needed updates in areas of high fi re risk, with rec- ommendations due by the end of the 2021 legislative session. The Oregon Homes Builders Association, the Oregon Association of Realtors, the Oregon Farm Bureau and the Oregon Property Owners Associa- tion opposed land use and defensible space prescrip- tions in Senate Bill 1536 last year. Mark Long, chief execu- tive of the builders associa- tion, said last week that his group is supportive of code changes to make homes more fi re resistant, but only if the state develops a searchable map that catego- rizes wildfi re risks for spe- cifi c geographic areas and the specifi c codes that apply based on those localized risks. An article last month in the Street Roots newspaper suggested that Long’s asso- ciation had reached a secret deal with the governor’s offi ce to head off such code changes. It included taped conversations of board members discussing that understanding. Both Long and the governor’s offi ce told The Oregonian that such a deal never existed. “Conversations are still ongoing with legislators and stakeholders about how we will be able to secure the funding for the gover- nor’s wildfi re preparedness priorities,” Charles Boyle, a spokesman for the gover- nor’s offi ce told The Orego- nian. “It is our hope that safe zone creation for homes will be a part of the fi nal pack- age. We also expect to again make recommendations for building codes in 2021 as we did in 2020, though it remains unclear if legisla- tors will support it.” The legislative concept envisions another $25 mil- lion for the Department of Forestry and the Oregon State Fire Marshal’s offi ce to bolster fi refi ghting, includ- ing aircraft and additional staff. Similar investments were contemplated last year, though they too generated debate from lawmakers con- cerned about investing new money in the fi nancially troubled Department of For- estry. 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