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FireSmart Protect Your Home From Wildfire

FireSmart Protect Your Home From Wildfire. Welcome. Introduction What? Why? How?. Facts About Fire. Did you know that… Fire is natures way of renewing the forest ecosystem and is necessary for the health of our forests.

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FireSmart Protect Your Home From Wildfire

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  1. FireSmartProtect Your Home From Wildfire

  2. Welcome • Introduction • What? • Why? • How?

  3. Facts About Fire Did you know that… • Fire is natures way of renewing the forest ecosystem and is necessary for the health of our forests. • Unfortunately, living in forested areas can be at odds with the natural fire regime. • Our attempt at preventing forest fires has actually created a higher risk of fire.

  4. Facts About Fire Did you know that… • Crowning forest fires often spread up to 5.5 km/hr, with spotting as far as 2 km ahead. • Wind blown grass fires can spread up to 8.5 km/hr. • This creates extreme dangers to anyone living in a forested area.

  5. Rural Reality • If you live near a forested region, sooner or later you will have to contend with the spread of a wildfire. • The best protection against loss, damage or injury due to wildfire is prevention. • A properly built home withstands fire with no intervention.

  6. Wildfire Video

  7. What is FireSmart? FireSmart is a program that helps you identify potential fire hazards and prepare your home and your community to protect or reduce damage to your property when a wildfire strikes.

  8. How FireSmart Is Your Home? • Do your own Home and Site Hazard Assessment

  9. Get Ready… • Some preventative measures cost very little and greatly reduce fire dangers. • Others require planning and a long-term commitment to change. • There are 3 areas where you can apply FireSmart standards to protect or reduce damage to your property should a wildfire strike.

  10. Site Preparation

  11. Interface Priority Zones

  12. Where to start…Zone 1 • Remove any shrubs, trees, deadfall or woodpiles from this area and keep the grass mowed and watered • Studies show that up to 85% of all homes with only this improvement (and a asphalt shingle roof) will be enough to save a home with no intervention.

  13. Zone 2 What to do: • Remove trees and debris that can spread fire upwards to become a fast spreading crown fire. • Remove or reduce the number of ever green trees in the area • Remove deadfall, thick shrubbery and mature trees

  14. Zone 3 What to do: • Thin or reduce shrubs and trees that make up the under story, retain fire resistant deciduous trees, space trees to reduce the potential for a crowning fire, producing a more Park like setting.

  15. Building Construction

  16. Building Materials and Design Standards FireSmart guidelines deal with building materials and design standards for: • Roofing materials • Exterior walls • Firebrand ignitions – such as eves, vents, decks, porches, trim, etc.; and • Doors and windows

  17. Is your roof FireSmart? • Asphalt shingle, clay tile, metal or non combustible materials (0 points) • Unrated wooden shakes (30 points)

  18. Are your exterior walls FireSmart? Non-combustible siding such as: • stucco, • metal siding, • brick, • cement shingles, concrete block and rock offer superior fire resistance (0 points)

  19. Is your home vulnerable to Firebrand Ignitions?

  20. Are your doors and window FireSmart? • Tempered glass (0 pts) • Double pane (1 or 2 pts) • Single pane (2 to 4 pts)

  21. Don’t be the cause of a wildfire • FireSmart your chimney • Locate burn barrels away from building and combustible items • Keep vegetation clear from power lines and propane tanks • Ensure adequate emergency vehicle access • Keep rakes and shovels handy.

  22. Action Plan… • Assess your home and site hazards • Identify significant hazards • Do the necessary cleanup and changes to keep your family, home and community safe

  23. Summary • You and your neighbours can reduce the hazards of Wildfire with a few preventative steps. • The FireSmart manual helps identify potential hazards • Homeowners should focus on site preparation and building construction

  24. Communications and Public Education • Effective public education is the key to preventing or minimizing fire risk in the wildland/urban interface

  25. Principles of effective communications • Clear objectives • Don’t make assumptions • Involve all parties • Identify and address particular interests of different groups • Identify with your audience • Coordinate with other organizations or groups

  26. Principles of Effective Communications • Choose your spokesperson carefully • Practice and test your message • Do not either minimize or exaggerate the level of risk • Promise only what you can do. Do what you promise • Plan carefully and evaluate your efforts

  27. Developing a Communications Plan • A communications plan will help you get started and keep you on track • With a plan your communications are likely to be strategic and proactive • Without a plan your communications may be scattered, ineffective and reactive • A simple plan executed well is more effective than a complex plan that gathers dust

  28. Elements of a Communications Plan • Target Audience • Purpose statement • Desired Outcomes • Current attitudes • Strategy • Strategic considerations • Messages • Spokesperson • Timing • Tools • Cost • Evaluation

  29. The Target Audience • Who are you trying to reach? • Involve local Fire Dept. • Target elected officials, industry, local government officials, land use planners and homeowners. • One way to reach home owners is through school programs

  30. Effective MessagesAll Audiences • Messages should be simple and expressed in terms that are easily understood

  31. Effective Media Relations • Be open with and accessible to reporters • Provide information tailored to the needs of each type of media • Provide background material on complex issues • Do not hesitate to follow up on stories with praise or constructive criticism • Try to establish long-term relations of trust with specific editors and reporters

  32. FireSmart Communications Plan - Example

  33. Target Audience • Homeowners and elected officials in the wildland/urban interface area

  34. Purpose • Increase awareness of the risk of interface fire in the community • Give stakeholders the information they need to make informed decisions about preventing and minimizing risk from fire • Reduce the number of fires and damage that results from fire

  35. Desired results • Everyone will know that wildfire is an issue that needs to be addressed. • Everyone will understand that the problem belongs to the community and that each has a responsibility for wildfire issues • Officials will approve resources needed to implement FireSmart awareness plan

  36. Desired Results • Individual landowners and residents will be motivated to take preventive action!

  37. Homeowners • Appoint a spokesperson to deliver messages • Inform homeowners about the issue and what their responsibilities are before and during a wildfire • Home owners need to know what wildfire prevention measures they can take to protect their home, family and community from wildfire

  38. HomeownersMessages • Wildfire is a hazard in our community • A wildfire incident will affect everyone in the community and every individual must share responsibility for the solution • During busy times their may not be enough firefighting resources to protect all buildings • Prevention measures can save your family, home, business or community

  39. Elected OfficialsConcerns • The amount of money and resources available • Whether members of council or board agree on the importance of reducing interface fire risk • Whether there is pressure from the public to do something about the issue

  40. Elected OfficialsMessages • If some thing is done about prevention our community will be better prepared to recover from an interface fire. • Prevention measures will reduce fire-related emergency response costs. • Residents will appreciate that our community is being proactive • It is irresponsible to do nothing to lessen effects of wildfire

  41. Spokespersons • Fire Chief • Fire personnel or a fire prevention officer • Director of Disaster services

  42. Timing • Fire season, April 1 to October 3 • Homeowners – during spring clean-up and planting season - Just before the start of high risk fire season. • Elected officials – before the next years budget is decided and well in advance of the fire season

  43. ToolsOne on One contact • Highly effective public education method to gain the respect of residents in the wildland interface. • If residents respect the knowledge of fire personnel and feel comfortable with their personality, they are more likely to listen and be more likely to implement their suggestions.

  44. Tools - Media • Submit articles to media sources. • Use facts as a starting point but develop a local angle. • If their has been a recent wildfire incident or mitigation activities use these to help launch your awareness

  45. ToolsWildfire Hazard Assessment forms • The most effective means of introducing hazard assessment is through fire personnel • Hazard assessment form and instruction is also available in the FireSmart manual and web site

  46. ToolsDisplays • Set up displays at community events like trade shows, fair grounds, schools etc. • To draw people to your display consider using videos, firefighting equipment, posters and maps

  47. Tools - Cost • Choose the communications tools that will give you the biggest bang for your buck. • Cost sharing with neighbouring communities or corporate sponsors

  48. Evaluation • Record the number of requests or inquiries regarding FireSmart • If fire personnel conduct hazard assessments or conduct door to door campaigns they will keep a record • Get feed back from target audience • Track increase in FireSmart homes and landscapes

  49. For more information Contact • Local fire department <address> <phone number> Office of the Fire Commissioner Toll Free 1-888-988-9488

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