Planning the Wildland-urban Interface


Book Description

"Wildfires pose a growing threat to communities across the country as development in the wildland-urban interface (WUI) accelerates. This PAS Report offers a holistic planning framework helping planners guide land-use decisions to create communities that are safer and more resilient to wildfire." -- from American Planning Association website.




Managing Fire in the Urban Wildland Interface


Book Description

A unique guide to solutions and strategies for managing fire at the urban edge. Offers analytical tools and comprehensive summaries not found in other manuals dealing with fire mitigation. Designed as a reference, it provides information on codes and laws, and includes case studies, tables, figures, suggested websites, and other source material. Draws on best practices from California, with lessons applicable nationwide. Equally useful to state, federal, and local agency staff and officials, fire agency staff, attorneys, architects, landscape architects, property owners, developers, insurance company managers, and business and community leaders.







Land Use Planning Approaches in the Wildland-urban Interface


Book Description

Within this broader context, this report focuses on a critical aspect of working towards community fire adaptation: analyzing effective land use policy and regulatory solutions in the wildland-urban interface (WUI). The WUI is any area where the built and natural environments create a set of conditions that allow for the ignition and continued spread of wildfire. The severity of how wildfire impacts the WUI is influenced by a number of factors, such as where and how homes, businesses, and infrastructure are developed, weather conditions, and the amount, type, and arrangement of vegetation. Land use planning plays a role in these development decisions, and therefore can be an effective means for reducing damage and losses in the WUI. State and local governments approach WUI planning through a variety of policy and regulatory frameworks. This report explores four western states—California, Colorado, Montana, and Washington—to better understand each state’s approach to wildfire policy and regulation, and to identify potential opportunities for reducing wildfire risk to communities in the future. An overview of the four-state analysis is summarized in Table 1.




The Fire Next Time


Book Description

Wildfire is a growing threat to suburban and exurban communities, partly because fires have grown more severe and frequent as a result of land use and climatic influences and partly because more people are living in fire prone areas. The so-called Healthy Forests Restoration Act (HFRA), the federal government's response to this crisis, is a deeply flawed statute that will likely exacerbate wildfire risks at the same time it makes real ecological restoration even harder. While HFRA took halting, partial steps toward the integration of broad and small scale land use planning, it was the outgrowth of a dysfunctional legislative process in Washington. Before the governance of public lands adapts completely to HFRA, this law should be overhauled (or, ideally, repealed). I suggest targeted reforms to bring about more transparency, greater clarity on what we mean by restoration, and more attention to the trade-offs entailed by further expansion into the wildland/urban interface.




Forests at the Wildland-Urban Interface


Book Description

Forests at the wildland-urban interface are at increasing risk due to the impacts of urbanization. Conserving and managing these forestlands for continued ecological and social benefits is a critical and complex challenge facing natural resource managers, land-use planners, and policymakers. Forests at the Wildland-Urban Interface: Conservat




Understanding Wildland Urban Interface with Prevention Planning


Book Description

Throughout history, the primary purpose of a Fire Department was to protect life and property. That protection met with various degrees of success. When citizens were willing to live by reasonable standards, the possibilities of success increased. The development of the Wildland Urban Interface created problems for many of today's Fire Departments. People moved into the wildlands to get away from the pressures of urban living. Many did so without being aware of the effect they would have on their new environment. They moved back to nature without the wisdom to successfully protect themselves from the wildlands. Wildland dwellers had to take some of the responsibilities for the prevention actions required for their owner's protection. Research was conducted for these purposes. First, Wildland Urban Interface: What it is, where it is, fire management problems, and wildland prevention planning.










Planning for Wildland/urban Interface Wildfires


Book Description

The project focus was to derive the key factors for performing a suitability assessment for future development in the Wildland/Urban Interface with regards to wildfire hazard. The sources for deriving these factors were based on relevant literature in forest management and land use planning contexts and through reviewing various community wildfire mitigation plans. The factors that were found for performing the assessment were: level of fire hazard, topography, water accessibility, ability to build firebreaks, transportation accessibility, forest management, ability to build densely, enforceable zoning, enforceable building codes and ordinances, community participation, proximity to fire services, and ability to train WUI fire fighters.