Wildfire Recovery

886 Words2 Pages

Introduction
Natural disasters include flood, wildfire, earthquake, tornado, extreme heat, hurricanes, landslides and mudslides, lightning strike, tsunami, volcano, winter weather, and windstorm (CDC, 2014). They affect thousands of people every year and give little or no warnings. These natural disasters come with many risks and preparation efforts by individuals, families, communities, cities, and organizations are needed to properly survive, combat, and be ready for them. Steps should be taken before, during, and after the disaster (CDC, 2014). There are steps that apply to all disasters, such as assembling a supply kit and developing a family emergency plan, that will be effective in being prepared and assist with recover (CDC, 2014). …show more content…

Wildfires are catastrophic and can cover a large area in minimum time and impose threats that affect the health of the public and the surrounding environment. The potential for wildfires exist and in order to protect from them, the possibility of them existing must be eliminated. Sometimes elimination is not possible, and in that case, protection practices and policies are employed (Ferguson & Janicak, 2015).
San Diego is prone to wildfires and regularly faces this disaster during dry conditions. It can affect a large area very quickly and can result in many injuries, illnesses, death, and damages (OSHA, n.d.). Some problems that this disaster may cause include diminished air quality by the presence of smoke, ash, toxins, and dust, as well as introduced pollution such as uncontrolled hazardous material (HAZMAT) and flying debris, into the soil and water (CalEPA, …show more content…

For example, in October 2007, San Diego experienced a fire that claimed 197,990 acres, 1,650 structures and 2 lives (CAL FIRE, 2015). Historically, wildfires are one of the most frequent hazards that San Diego faces (CAL FIRE, 2012). These fires occur several times annually with little or no warning (CAL FIRE, 2012).
Some of these catastrophic fires give no warning as they are ignited by lightening, arsons, powerlines or just plain human carelessness (CAL FIRE, 2015). San Diego is among the cities in California that are identified as very high fire hazard severity zones (CAL FIRE, 2012). The impact these fires have extended to the water sources, plants, animals, soil, people, and property (San Diego State University Foundation, 2004).
A Flow of the extent of the damages that may be caused from a fire include: damage to watershed that lead to contamination and lack of water. This later contributes to the drought that is being experienced with mandated water conservation regulations. Vegetation is not receiving water that is needed for them to grow and put water back into the soil and atmosphere to create rain. A lack of rain leads to dry, hot climate which is the prime climate for

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