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November 4, 2024

The Pathfinding Partnerships Award from CO-LABS recognizes impactful, collaborative research projects organized by four or more research entities, including federal labs, in Colorado. This year, the Wildfire Research (WiRē) team received this award for their support of evidence-based community wildfire education to help communities live with wildfire. 

Growing need to reduce wildfire risk

As wildfire frequency and severity increases worldwide and urban populations expand further into wildlands, communities will face increasing risk of interaction with wildfire. Scientific research has established effective practices for reducing wildfire risk to homes and communities, like improving fire department access to land parcels, removing flammable materials or vegetation near buildings, and developing evacuation plans before an emergency happens. However, people exposed to wildfire may be unaware of details of their wildfire risk, and they may face many different barriers to doing wildfire risk mitigation projects on and around their properties. 

Community-focused wildfire risk mitigation

To improve wildfire preparedness, the Wildfire Research (WiRē) Team partners with wildfire mitigation and education organizations to support the development of local, evidence-based wildfire programs that are tailored to the needs of individual communities. The team works with wildfire practitioners to collect, interpret, and use paired parcel-level wildfire risk and social data for all homes within study communities. While certain components of the data collection and analyses are standardized across all communities, local practitioners drive research questions, how the research is shared with their community and what kinds of wildfire risk mitigation programs develop from the research. Communities have used the data from this research to tell stories, shape the programs they offer, populate grant proposals, and facilitate understanding of wildfire risk mitigation.

someone wearing a blue shirt holds a tablet at the steps of a house
The parcel-level rapid wildfire risk assessment is conducted by trained assessors who visit all homes within a study community, recording a short list of wildfire risk-related characteristics for all homes based on the latest understandings from fire science. This parcel-level risk data is then paired with the results of a household social survey to understand perceptions and decisions about wildfire risk on the properties. Here, a trained assessor uses a tablet to record data, with permission from the property owner to be on premises. Other property assessments are conducted from the road.
a black car with "wildfire mitigation specialist" on the side drives along a dirt road, through a forest
Trained assessors drive to all homes in the community to ensure community members of aware of the assessment and represented in the data.

WiRē-based Projects

Here are just a few examples of how communities are using data collected with the WiRē Team to mitigate wildfire risk.

WiRē | Genesee Fire Protection District

WiRē | Genesee Fire Protection District

Creating resilient fire-adapted communities: Routt County Wildfire Mitigation Council

Creating resilient fire-adapted communities: Routt County Wildfire Mitigation Council

Not if, but When: Fire Adapted Colorado

Not if, but When: Fire Adapted Colorado

City of Santa Fe Wildfire Risk Assessments

City of Santa Fe Wildfire Risk Assessments

Success through collaboration

man standing in front of a tv screen and whiteboard, facing a small audience.
FORT Economist and WiRē Team member James Meldrum shares a map of ongoing or completed mitigation projects on a recent tour of the Genesee Fire Rescue Station.

WiRē is a research group from the USGS, US Forest Service, CU-Boulder, and the nonprofit Wildfire Research Center that partners with wildfire organizations on community-specific projects. In each community where WiRē operates, the Team and its partners work together closely throughout the research process, from project development to data collection to analyzing and sharing results. The CO-LABS award recognizes Colorado-based partnerships with the Colorado State Forest Service, Routt County Wildfire Mitigation Council, Genesee Fire Protection District, and West Region Wildfire Council. WiRē has also worked with similar organizations in seven other states throughout the U.S. and maintains active relationships beyond individual projects, with partners joining a community of practice and often returning for additional projects.  

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