Earlier this year, Placer County Resource Conservation District (Placer RCD), with funding and support from CAL FIRE, developed the Placer Prescribed Burn Association (Placer PBA) to equip private landowners in the county with the skills, knowledge, and confidence necessary to use prescribed fire. Placer RCD recently received another $75,000 grant from Coalitions and Collaboratives, Inc., a Colorado-based organization that supports place-based natural conservation work, to expand staff capacity, increase technical assistance and workshops for landowners, and create a burn permit subsidy program.
Placer RCD will offer at least five workshops throughout the winter months that cover a spectrum of important prescribed fire topics with the focused intention of creating safe burn practitioners and transitioning knowledge into on-the-ground implementation. Topics include prescribed fire liability, permitting, fire effects on native plants, hazard mitigation, and heat management, among others. In addition, Placer RCD grant funds may support eligible workshop participants for subsidized air quality burn permits. The workshop series and associated demonstration burns have been made possible through strong multi-agency partnerships between Placer RCD, CAL FIRE, the University of California Cooperative Extension, Todd’s Valley Miwok Maidu Cultural Foundation, United Auburn Indian Community, Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), and Placer Air Quality Pollution Control District.
Placer RCD is dedicated to assisting the community by reducing barriers and improving access to resources and tools for fire-resilient communities, forests, and working lands. When conducted in a manner that generates low-severity impacts, prescribed burning offers a myriad of benefits including fuels reduction, increased soil water infiltration, native plant stewardship, invasive species management, improvements in wildlife habitat, and soil carbon sequestration.
To join, ask questions, or learn more about Placer PBA and other educational opportunities, please contact:
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Cordi Craig
Prescribed Fire Program Manager
The AIM program is supported by a cooperative agreement with the USDA Forest Service. In accordance with federal law and the U.S. Department of Agriculture policy, this organization is prohibited from discriminating on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age or disability.
To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room 326-W, Whitten Building, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call toll free voice (866) 632-9992, TDD (800) 877-8339, or voice relay (866) 377-8642. USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
Conservation Partners
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Action, Implementation, and Mitigation
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CAL FIRE
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Coalitions and Collaboratives, Inc.
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U.S. Forest Service
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United Auburn Indian Community
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Todd’s Valley Miwok Maidu Cultural Foundation
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Placer County Air Pollution Control District
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Natural Resources Conservation Service
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University of California Cooperative Extension