Reading the non-stop drumbeat from Gov. Brown about Cap-and-Trade, our own little Paris Accord and whatever else he can think up (no need to link to any of it–you are already awash in it), I can't help wondering why he can't seem to focus on the biggest threat to the California environment that just keeps going and going? Per KTVU
The last five years have been very dry and fiery in California, both in terms of numbers of wildfires that erupted through the state and the total acres burned. While the winter rains certainly wet the Earth in 2016, this year is also on pace to be a dangerous fire season, according to statistics released by the state.
In 2016, nearly 7,000 fires scorched a total of 622,000 acres throughout the state, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. The year before that, 8,000 fires ripped through 880,000 acres of Earth, CalFire statistics show. The record year for acres burned in a fire was set in 2008, when more than 1. 5 million acres burned. The record year for number of fires battled was set in 1999, when more than 11,000 wildfires burned through the state.
This week, crews were fighting 14 large wildfires throughout the state, including the biggest one in Northern California’s Butte County, where the Wall Fire, which had scorched about 6,000 acres and displaced 4,000 people.
Dry years have fires. Wet years cause undergrowth to bloom and hence more fires. Wouldn't it be sensible to address this with more manpower, aircraft, trucks, lookouts, sensors, etc? Isn't it obvious?


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