Crime & Safety
Properties At Risk For Wildfire Damage In Hollywood
Another destructive wildfire season fueled by extreme drought looms in California. Here's what it means for Hollywood.
HOLLYWOOD, CA -- Last year, 8,835 wildfires in the Golden State leveled 3,629 structures. As California anticipated a dry summer, authorities geared up to defend houses and businesses around the state from potential fires.
Some 80 million properties in the U.S. are at risk of exposure to wildfire, according to a new model and report from the nonprofit First Street Foundation. About 16% of the nationโs population lives in areas prone to wildfire damage, according to a Washington Post analysis of the groupโs data.
California was identified as one of the states with the highest wildfire risk.
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There are 2,096 properties in Hollywood that have some risk of being affected by wildfire over the next 30 years. This represents 37% of all properties in Hollywood, according to data from First Street Foundation.
Extreme drought conditions and rising temperatures contribute to longer and more destructive wildfire seasons in the Golden State. This year, 1,734 wildfires have already scorched 7,464 acres, according to Cal Fire.
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Januaryโs extended dry spell was expected to continue into the spring with little precipitation, leaving most of the state in moderate to extreme drought conditions before summer. Dry conditions with above-normal temperatures through spring will leave fuel moisture levels lower than normal, increasing the potential for wildland fires, according to CalFire.
The 2022 fire season officially kicked into high gear when a wildfire in Orange County tore through some 20 homes and hundreds of acres last week. But experts said that fire season is more likely a year-round event nowadays.
โSummer in California no longer means the beginning of fire season. Rather, it means we are about to enter the roughest six or so months of a fire season that never ends,โ said Bill Deverell, director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West and head of The West on Fire research project, according to USC News.
โDrought and the increasing effects of climate change come together in creating the likelihood โ even the certainty โ of bigger, hotter and more catastrophic fires year to year,โ he said.
A significant lack of rain in recent months will likely set the stage for a dangerous fire season, meteorologists at AccuWeather predicted earlier this month.
"Unfortunately, in a nutshell, it looks like itโs going to be another busy season," he said. "Weโre seeing a lot of drought. Almost half of the country is experiencing drought and the bulk of that is to the West," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Dave Samuhel said, adding that AccuWeather forecasters "are expecting an above-average fire season."
Samuhel said he expects the 2022 season to burn 9.5 million acres of land across the western U.S. โ 130% of the five-year average and 140% of the 10-year average.
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