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The October 1991 firestorm that swept into
the Oakland hills was the deadliest of
California wildfires.
In just 15 hours, strong, dry winds drove
flames through eucalyptus groves and canyons
thick with untrimmed brush, destroying 3,000
hillside homes and incinerating 25 people.
Now, 12 years after the devastating blaze,
an Oakland citizens group is striving to
persuade voters here to pay to maintain a
program to control vegetation before it
becomes a lethal hazard. The proposed
measures include the use of goats, which
would graze on the hillsides and consume
combustible brush.
Some officials see the Oakland proposal as a
model for fire- prone Southern California
communities seeking means to clear fuel from
surrounding wild lands.
However, in 1997, a similar campaign here
failed, and once again, organizers find
themselves contending with hill dwellers who
already believe they pay their fair share of
municipal taxes, more than enough to cover
the proposed brush management program. As
much as anything, perhaps, the campaign
organizers are up against the tendency to
turn a blind eye to threats inherent in
beautiful, dangerous places such as the
wooded hills overlooking San Francisco Bay.
The proposed 10-year, $18-million fire
prevention program would be funded by an
annual levy on homeowners, ranging from $32
to $65.
In addition to putting goats out to graze in
public open spaces, the program would pay
for manual brush and grass clearance,
inspectors to monitor private property
conformance, and "roving fire patrols"
during the fire season.
The Oakland campaign to create a special
assessment district may have been given a
timely boost by the terrifying television
images of recent Southern California fires,
which stirred the memories of 1991 Oakland
fire victims.
"Because of the emotion generated by the
Southern California fires, I fear this one
is likely to pass," said Oakland teacher
John Willson, 54, who opposes the measure,
saying that it is an unfair tax on the hill
community where he lives.
"A number of us are concerned that this is
just a ploy by the city to pad its budget
during difficult fiscal times," Willson
said. He and others complain that the
cash-strapped Oakland government views hill
dwellers as "cash cows."
Others argue that the plan is necessary, and
inexpensive at the price.
"It is suicide not to do this," countered
Bob Sieven, 66,
an Oakland neurologist who supports the
proposal. Sieven
estimates that he has volunteered 1,000
hours of his time over the past three years,
clearing tons of highly flammable French
broom plants and Monterey pines from private
land surrounding his hillside townhouse. The
assessment district would pay for similar
clearance from public lands, parks and
forests.
"The whole point is that once a fire
starts," said Sieven,
"all you can do is get out of there. But if
you do your work in advance, you can
mitigate it and have a chance to control
it."
What happens to the special district
proposal in Oakland, supporters say, could
be a precedent for communities in San Diego,
Ventura and San Bernardino as they struggle
to finance similar vegetation control plans
in areas where parks and forests abut
housing developments.
Oakland City Councilwoman Jean Quan said
several Southern California officials have
already contacted her about the Oakland
initiative, which, under the complicated
rules governing special districts, will come
to a final vote in January after a public
hearing.
"When you live in fire and earthquake
country you have to face these kinds of
issues," said Quan, who represents the
Oakland hill district hit by the 1991 blaze.
"The same thing we are trying to do here
could be applied in many other places. The
virtue of the assessment district is that it
charges only those people who are going to
get the service."
Under the Oakland plan, which has been
endorsed by Mayor Jerry Brown and the entire
City Council, a special Wildfire Prevention
Assessment District would be created to
cover fire-prone areas, mostly in the hills
above Oakland containing 21,000 households.
Under state laws governing special
assessment districts, only property owners
inside the district
vote, and their votes are weighted by
the amount of property they own.
Since 1978, when Proposition 13 capped
property taxes, counties and municipalities
have turned increasingly to assessment and
special tax districts to fund programs and,
in some cases, even basic services.
According to the state controller's office,
California has more than 3,400 special
districts in the state, ranging from
minuscule cemetery and mosquito abatement
districts to the giant Metropolitan Water
District of Southern California that serves
17 million people in six counties.
Recent state records list 386 special fire
protection districts. However, nearly all of
these were created for basic firefighting
needs, such as equipment and fire stations.
In 1993, two years after the Oakland fire
when memories of the horror were fresh, the
City Council created the state's first
vegetation management special district.
However, the district had a five-year sunset
provision that expired in 1997.
In the interim, California voters had passed
Proposition 218, which required a popular
vote to create special districts. The
approval of two-thirds of registered voters
is necessary for a special tax district
while half of voting property owners must
agree to a special assessment district, such
as the one proposed for Oakland.
The change in voting procedure forced
Oakland officials to go to the polls in 1997
to continue the vegetation management
district. To the shock of many, voters
rejected the proposal.
The problem was overconfidence, said Sue
Piper, a marketing consultant whose home was
destroyed in the 1991 fire. Supporters could
not imagine anyone who had seen the Oakland
fire rejecting any fire prevention proposal.
"Everyone thought it was a slam dunk, and it
failed," said Piper, who coordinates the
current campaign from her rebuilt home in
the Oakland hills.
The campaign has its own Web site, at
www.oaklandwild
firepreventiondistrict.org. Organizers stage
regular events, including photography
exhibits, to remind voters of the 1991 fire.
To keep fire danger awareness alive, Piper
and her husband, Gordon, organized the
construction of two memorials, the Firestorm
Memorial Garden near their Hiller Heights
home and a permanent exhibit center on a
dramatic overlook of San Francisco Bay.
Public officials have done their part to
stress the urgency of the measure. After the
1997 voter rejection, vegetation management
has been funded by a combination of state
and federal grants and money from the
general fund. But beginning next year, said
Councilwoman Quan, these funds will not be
available.
"At a time when we are closing libraries and
laying off policemen," said Quan, "I would
feel awkward about taking this out of the
general fund."
Opponent Willson complains about this as
"Mafioso style, either pay up or burn out"
politics.
The use of 1991 fire pictures to push the
cause, Willson said, "is like taking a
picture of a hungry child in the Third World
and pocketing the donations. It's a cover-up
for an inept, incompetent city government."
Floyd and Claudette Crump, both 65, live in
a large Mediterranean- style house they
built after their first home was destroyed
in the 1991 fire. Three pets -- a dog, cat
and a parrot -- perished in the blaze. The
Crumps lost all
of their family mementos and their
collection of vintage wines.
Since the fire, the
couple have been active on the fire
prevention committee of their neighborhood
homeowners association.
Around their new home, they planted fire
resistant trees and shrubbery. Both
wholeheartedly support the proposed fire
district assessment plan.
"If we don't do anything to prevent it,"
said Floyd Crump, a retired businessman, "it
could happen again. Once is enough." |