Why Prescribed Fire?
Much of the Sierra Nevada is a fire dependent ecosystem which historically burned frequently at low intensity, but decades of fire suppression have not allowed fire to play its needed role in this ecosystem. From time immemorial, Indigenous peoples have used fire on the landscape to benefit the ecosystem. The suppression of all fire since colonization, from wildfire to cultural burning, has resulted in forests and woodlands with historically high density of trees, vegetation, and biomass. Prescribed fire is a critical tool for managing working rangelands and forests in the Sierra Nevada.
What is a Prescribed Burn Association?
As California experiences worsening wildfires, Prescribed Burn Associations (PBAs) offer residents an opportunity to take back control by using a tool that has long served the land. The regular application of low-intensity, low-severity fire makes massively devastating wildfires far less likely to occur. Other PBAs throughout the state have demonstrated over several years of burning that utilizing prescribed fire on private lands can be a cost-effective, safe, and accessible tool for landowners to reduce wildfire hazard and meet a variety of ecological objectives.
PBA members pool their resources and energy to conduct carefully planned burns under specified prescriptions to maintain productive forests and grasslands, enhance wildlife habitat, and ensure safer communities. A PBA can offer support and education to landowners and community members to expand capacity for utilizing intentional fire. The first PBA was formed in Humboldt County and now there are at least 20 in various stages of development throughout the state.
“Being a part of your local PBA is similar in concept to a barn-raising or a calf-branding: neighbors help neighbors implement burns by sharing labor, equipment, and skills” (Cal PBA website). Find more information on PBAs statewide here.
El Dorado Amador Prescribed Burn Association
The El Dorado Amador Prescribed Burn Association (EAPBA) was formed in late 2021 through the University of California Cooperative Extension to serve El Dorado and Amador counties. The goal of the EAPBA is to provide the community with training, equipment, and support to empower landowners to conduct intentional burns on their properties. Since formation the PBA has hosted several workshops, training events, and small burns. The PBA also recently received grant funds in summer 2022 from the Department of Conservation to hire a coordinator and continue to expand training efforts.
The mission of the EAPBA is to expand long-term community capacity for safe, legal, and ecologically sound prescribed fire implementation in the region, through collaboration with landowners, local experts, and existing organizations and agencies. We are currently working to expand our capacity for education and implementation and build up a cache of equipment for landowner burning and there are several ways community members can get involved.