Are We Prepared for Wildfire Season?

Welcome to Flash Back Friday!
In this edition, we are re-posting a previous Irvine Watchdog article below that discussed local resident concerns with evacuation routes during the 2020 Irvine wildfire that forced 60,000 people from their homes.
- What lessons were learned?
- Do you have a family emergency plan?
- Has any Irvine communication procedures or evacuation plans changed?
- Have you signed up for local emergency alerts?
As we prepare for another dry summer, the risk of a wildfire is still very real and we encourage you to prepare. Here are links to few valuable resources:
- Orange County provides an emergency alert system. Register for AlertOC HERE for time-sensitive voice or text messages that can be sent to you home or mobile phone, email and hearing impaired receiving devices.
- Use the Ready, Set Go! Action plan to be better prepared.
- Review the City of Irvine’s Emergency Management Plan
Here is our Flash Back Friday Article:
Written by Wesley Oliphant
Published February 3, 2019, 10:34 pm America/Irvine
During the summer and fall of this past year, much of the news surrounded the fires in California. It is little wonder why. This year’s wildfire season was considered to be one of the most damaging ever recorded. According to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, nearly 1.7 million acres burned which is the biggest amount burned in a single fire season. But what was particularly scary was the death toll from the Camp Fire in a city called Paradise in Northern California’s Butte County that killed 86 people.
What were some of the causes? Like other tragedies, this city’s death toll had many causes which were the hot weather and according to a recent LA Times article included having no plan to evacuate the entire city at one time, using a public alert system that itself was vulnerable to fire and not giving out a city order to evacuate. But another cause mentioned is the following: “Developers started with what had been gold mine trails and then apple orchard roads to pave a street system that maximized buildable space the way blood vessels branch into capillaries. There are nearly 100 miles of private roads that dead-end on narrow overlooks and few connector streets.”
Are there similar areas of concern for Irvine? I am not familiar with all the geography of Irvine. But two possible areas of concern come from my neighborhood of Portola Springs which appears to be partially in an area designated as a “very high fire hazard severity zone” according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. In the area between Portola Parkway and Irvine Boulevard that is west of Arrowhead, there are two exit routes on Arrowhead and on Native Springs but both going north to Portola Parkway. What if the fire is coming down from the north and fast? There is an exit to the south on Native Springs leading to Irvine Boulevard. But it is blocked by a locked gate. According to Irvine resident RA Anderson who wrote about this in a recent Nextdoor post in my neighborhood, the police would open this way up during an emergency. But as the resident went on to ask: Will the police actually do this in the chaos of such a major fire? How many residents even know about this? Sadly, this thread died off with no answers.
Another area next to Portola Springs and Modjeska (with the streets of Hemisphere and Ceremony) has a similar problem. There is only one way in and out, a two-lane highway. It could have been connected to Portola Parkway but is closed off – again some kind of one lane leading to a gate. The two-lane road goes south but then winds north a bit to get to Modjeska. On the Modjeska and Portola Parkway intersection, there is a fire station. If there is a major fire that one fire truck cannot handle and even if it comes from the north, will there be enough time to escape?
Keep in mind two things. First, consider the following passage from that recent LA Times article: “After 2008, a forest road north was paved to provide escape for residents on the upper ridge above Paradise. On the day of the fire, the narrow winding passage jammed and was impassable.” Second, wildfires are not necessarily slow. For example, the Camp Fire in Northern California moved the length of a football field every second.
In California, evacuation planning has been and continues to be a local responsibility.
- In Irvine, is there a plan for a city-wide evacuation?
- What are the escape routes for the different communities?
- Are there more routes out of Irvine than the normal roads we drive every day?
- If so, how many people know about them?
- How long will it take to escape by car if a major fire comes?
- Will these routes get clogged up in an actual emergency?
- While there are 2,000 members of Irvine’s CERT (Community Emergency Response Team), are they located in every neighborhood and do they have any training for fire evacuation?
So many questions.
Again, I do not know much about Irvine’s geography and am no fire expert. What I am is a concerned Irvine resident. A cursory look at city maps seem to show several areas with very few escape routes – especially some of the areas built more recently. But if such concerns are not serious and (hopefully) I do not know what I am talking about, I would like to know. If such concerns are serious, I want to know and to see how and when such concerns will be addressed.
According to Transportation Commissioner Chair (and recent City Council candidate) Carrie O’Malley, she intends to place fire and flood evacuation on a future Transportation Commission Meeting agenda. As of now, she estimates it will occur in May. I hope some of these concerns can be addressed.
With the change in weather and the fires no longer in the news, attention has shifted elsewhere – e.g., the partial shutdown in Washington, the end of the HOV green and white stickers – and may not return until the next fire season or the next major fire in California. But I believe that consideration of major problems needs to be proactive and not reactive. Accordingly, questions need to be answered, whether fires are part of the current news cycle or not.
1 Comments
Doug Elliott
June 25, 2021 at 1:44 pmThanks for republishing this important piece. Last fall’s fires underscore the importance of the issue raised–Irvine is fortunate to have escaped those fires with no loss of life. Wesley Oliphant focused on the situation in his own village, but much of Irvine is similarly vulnerable. Our major thoroughfares are primarily a grid made up of historic rural roads through the Irvine Ranch. In older cities such as Santa Ana and Orange, the grid pattern was followed in the development of residential neighborhoods, resulting in a multiplicity of exit routes. In contrast, the streets of many–if not most–of Irvine’s neighborhoods form a labyrinth rather than a grid. This is great for limiting traffic on residential streets; not so great for quick evacuations, let alone public transit. With new development occurring in areas that are particularly vulnerable wildfires, perhaps the wisdom of the labyrinth model needs to be reconsidered.
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