California’s 'zone zero' fire rules clash with LA’s need for shade

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California’s 'zone zero' fire rules clash with LA’s need for shade
LandscapingPlantsZone Zero
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Homeowners in fire hazard zones may have to remove bushes, hedges and flowers within 5 feet of their houses — even as extreme heat becomes more dangerous.

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Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less.Clara Solis would hate to lose the hedge outside her window. It’s on the sunny, south side of her house in Highland Park and it provides shade on hot days. It also offers some protection against pollution from the 110 Freeway just two blocks away. Her neighbors have similarly placed plants. “They don’t have a lot of green space, just a few shrubs right by their windows usually to kind of protect them from the sound and noise and from pollution,” she said.But if new statewide fire safety regulations go into effect, Solis — and the many other Los Angeles County residents who live in fire hazard zones — will have to remove most plants from the areas closest to their homes. “I am concerned that if they pass this, people are just going to go left and right cutting down trees,” Solis, a member of theduring the final months of 2025 that would require homeowners in designated “very high” fire hazard zones throughout the state to clear the first 5 feet of space around their homes of any flammable materials, an area the agency refers to as “zone zero.” Those flammable materials include landscaping such as bushes, hedges and flowers . The list also includes firewood, fallen leaves and attached fences that are made of combustible materials like wood. Well-maintained trees would be allowed in zone zero but only if the branches are pruned so that the lowest are at least 5 feet above the roof. The intention is to create an “ember-resistant zone” around the home, providing fewer opportunities for a fire to spread to the building and improving safety for firefighters who may need to get close to the home in an emergency.grown, those zones combined make up about 3,626 square miles — an area almost twice the size of Delaware — and are home to approximately 3.7 million people.And the same rules will apply to all very high fire hazard zones in California, including densely populated neighborhoods of Los Angeles, where for some residents, 5 feet is just about all that separates one house from the other or from the street., lives in a very high hazard zone in Studio City, an area where the new regulations will be in effect. Five feet is the entire distance between Nicole’s house and the street. And the back side of her house is sloped and prone to mudslides. With zone zero, she would have to replace crucial landscaping with a retaining wall; she was quoted $80,000 for one a decade ago — a cost she cannot afford.These rules come at a time when L.A. is getting serious about its shade shortage as the threat of extreme heat grows. Shade is especially lacking in L.A.’sto regulate these ember-resistant zones in 2020, but implementation stalled until February of this year, when Gov. Gavin Newsom issued anAfter months of holding workshops in Sacramento, the Board of Forestry held its first public meetings in Southern California last month. Hundreds of people attended the Pasadena town hall–style meeting Sept. 18, and over the course of nearly seven hours, about 75 L.A. County residents spoke. Most were critical of zone zero, including some who had lost their homes in the Eaton and Palisades fires. But even the critics were not entirely opposed to the rules. Most seemed to agree that replacing wood fences with an ember-resistant material is a good idea. Removing firewood and dead leaves, also good. But the statewide, one-size-fits-all rules on vegetation rankled most of them.led by Francisco Escobedo of the Forest Service suggested that the type and moisture level of vegetation in zone zero matters — that well-hydrated vegetation might not pose a threat — and that it varies among regions within California. Max Moritz, a wildfire specialist with the University of California Cooperative Extension at UCSB, saw some evidence of this as he toured the Altadena burn area with colleagues in April. He said what they saw on the ground didn’t quite line up with the proposed zone zero rules on vegetation. “We were seeing lots of homes that burned with green vegetation around them," he said."And many times, if that green vegetation was scorched, it was scorched from the home itself burning.”the importance of the Forest Service study, citing the limitation of its methods, and points to other research that supports zone zero.Once enacted, the owners of existing homes will have three years to comply with the new rules. The costs could be high. Anto implement ember-resistant renovations — similar to the current zone zero proposal — for a home in Auburn, near Sacramento, was about $13,000. For most people in L.A., rules enforcement will fall to local fire departments, and it’s unclear how that will work.“Unfortunately, that is what’s happening around my neighborhood, and it causes trees to be pruned incorrectly,” she said. “And they eventually die. Or they become a liability to their property.”“I feel that there are other ways to take care of this instead of being so reactive,” she said. At LAist, we believe in journalism without censorship and the right of a free press to speak truth to those in power. Our hard-hitting watchdog reporting on local government, climate, and the ongoing housing and homelessness crisis is trustworthy, independent and freely accessible to everyone thanks to the support of readers like you.Congress voted to eliminate funding for public media across the country. Here at LAist that means a loss of $1.7 million in our budget every year. We want to assure you that despite growing threats to free press and free speech, LAist will remain a voice you know and trust. Speaking frankly, the amount of reader support we receive will help determine how strong of a newsroom we are going forward to cover the important news in our community.With more individuals like you supporting this public service, we can continue to provide essential coverage for Southern Californians that you can’t find anywhere else.JPL, the Southern California NASA center, is laying off hundreds of employeesBilly Idol on defining punk, the rush of performing, YUNGBLUD and riding his Triumph through LAMany CA cities wanted to build more housing by eliminating stair requirements. Only Culver City got it done What do stairs have to do with California’s housing crisis? More than you might think, says this Culver City councilmember.Uber driver charged in connection with starting the Palisades Fire The Palisades Fire erupted on Jan. 7 and went on to kill 12 people and destroy more than 6,800 homes and buildings.Inside Cal State's big $17 million bet on ChatGPT for allWhich schools get to have crossing guards? Here’s how LA is changing the system LA’s legal cannabis owners say multi-million dollar program to give them a hand up, instead left ‘complete debt and devastation’

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