Editorial: Fire is a statewide issue
Publisher’s note: This editorial is from the Sept. 18, 2014, Sacramento Bee.
Fire has a tipping point in hot, dry weather. As the relative humidity drops – 22 percent is the magic number, according to fire officials – benign situations can morph into catastrophes.
A car with a hot engine parked near some dead brush, barbecue coals tossed into the trash, even a lawnmower hitting a rock during a California fire season can set off a conflagration. Three years of drought have just upped the ante.
Just last week in Orange County’s Silverado Canyon, a jerry-built garden fence made out of metal sheeting got so hot that it touched off a 1,600-acre brush fire.
Californians tend to think of this as a rural problem. It isn’t. This year’s fire fear isn’t just about Pollock Pines and Weed.