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Texas A&M Forest Service urges citizens to prepare their communities for wildfire season

Source: Texas A&M Forest Service | May 1, 2020

Texas A&M Forest Service urges citizens to prepare their communities for wildfire season

While Texans are doing things differently this spring and summer, the threat of wildfire is constant. By taking a proactive approach to wildfire prevention, homeowners can significantly increase their safety and their home’s likelihood of survival during a catastrophic event.

This was illustrated during the still-smoldering Holcombe Road Fire, a wildfire in Crockett and Val Verde Counties, which started on April 19 and was at 25,958 acres on May 1, 2020.

Rich Gray, Operations Section Chief on the wildfire and Texas A&M Forest Service’s Chief Regional Fire Coordinator, stated that several structures were saved thanks to the mitigation work and defensible space the property owners created, providing the firefighters a safer space to work.

“The actions you take to reduce the risk on your property before a fire occurs can make all the difference,” said Gray. “When a 20,000 plus acre wildfire is raging toward your home, you may feel powerless. But you are not. If you prepare your home now, before smoke is ever in the air, you can help increase its survivability.”

Texas A&M Forest Service works directly with communities across Texas, identifying the communities most vulnerable to wildfires, and helps create Community Wildfire Preparedness Plans.

Adapting to the COVID-19 guidelines, the agency turned to social media to this year to help Texans ready their communities for the upcoming wildfire season, posting live videos of employees walking around their homes and demonstrating how to create defensible space.

“With the increase in wildfire activity and warmer weather on the way, now is the perfect time to prepare your home,” said Hines. “These are easy steps that anyone can take around their homes, while at home, to decrease the chance that a wildfire may start, and if it does, to decrease the risk from that fire to your home and family.”

Texas A&M Forest Service created a Wildfire Home Preparation Checklist to help guide Texans at home. Complete the checklist at https://bit.ly/3avN510.

“By protecting your home, you help protect your community and create a safer space for your first responders to work,” said Gray.

Over the last month, a fifth of Texas A&M Forest Service personnel responded to the Holcombe Road Fire in West Texas. While in East Texas, Texas A&M Forest Service responded to tornadoes in Polk and Newton Counties. In Central Texas, agency personnel worked around the clock alongside Texas Division of Emergency Management to prepare and ship personal protective equipment (PPE) and other COVID-19-related items to first responders on the front lines.

“Even in the midst of a pandemic, natural disasters will continue to happen,” said Gray. “We’re tasked by the State of Texas to respond to them. One way citizens can help our first responders is by preparing their property and to keep wildfires from ever starting.”

For more information about protecting your home, visit tfsweb.tamu.edu/ProtectYourHome/.

Follow Texas A&M Forest Service on Facebook for more mitigation and prevention information at bit.ly/2dARmpR.

Written by:
kristin
Published on:
May 19, 2020

Categories: Disasters, Natural Resources, The Cattleman Now, The Cattleman Now - App

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