logo
#

Latest news with #JuniperFire

Residents could be evacuated due to Juniper Fire near Black Canyon City in Yavapai County
Residents could be evacuated due to Juniper Fire near Black Canyon City in Yavapai County

Yahoo

time04-07-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

Residents could be evacuated due to Juniper Fire near Black Canyon City in Yavapai County

A 600-acre fire blazing through rugged terrain in the Bradshaw Mountains has prompted the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office to upgrade the evacuation status of the Horsethief Basin community as fire crews responded. The Juniper Fire started on Bureau of Land Management lands about 5 miles west of Black Canyon City on July 2, according to Inciweb, a federal incident tracker. The Sheriff's Office has moved the YCU-2342 and YCU-2477 zones to "set" status following the state's "ready, set, go" evacuation program, meaning residents in the area should identify nearby shelters, gather essential items and prepare to leave the area if given an evacuation order by public safety officials. The YCU-2342 zone included north of Forest Service 234, West Campwood Road; south of Crown King Road; east of South Senator Highway, Crown King Road and west of NF-684, West Campwood Road, FS 684. The YCU-2477 zone included north of West Campwood Road; south of South Senator Highway, Horse Thief Road; east of West Campwood Road and west of West Campwood Road. Residents can refer to a map of the affected areas here: As of 2:30 p.m. July 3, the Juniper Fire was not threatening any structures, and the Sheriff's Office asked the public to avoid recreating in the area and to be cautious of fire crew operations. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: 600-acre Juniper Fire prompts 'set' status for residents near Horsethief Basin

A New Blueprint for Disaster Relief—Human-Centered, Tech-Enabled, and Community-Led
A New Blueprint for Disaster Relief—Human-Centered, Tech-Enabled, and Community-Led

Newsweek

time02-07-2025

  • General
  • Newsweek

A New Blueprint for Disaster Relief—Human-Centered, Tech-Enabled, and Community-Led

Six months after the Eaton Wildfires ravaged Los Angeles County (Altadena and Palisades), many families are still navigating systems and deliberating on whether or how to rebuild. As the 2025 hurricane season begins, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warns it may be one of the most active in decades, a stark reminder that communities must prepare even as they recover. Amid these escalating threats, there's deeper uncertainty: Who will show up when disaster strikes? FEMA's acting administrator has acknowledged gaps in hurricane readiness, and staff reductions are shifting more response responsibilities to under-resourced state and local governments. This moment underscores what many already know: disaster recovery systems are failing those who need them most. What if recovery didn't depend on navigating broken systems? What if the people closest to the crisis were trusted to lead the response? A firefighter sprays water as the Juniper Fire burns on June 30, 2025, near Perris, Calif. A firefighter sprays water as the Juniper Fire burns on June 30, 2025, near Perris, a former mayor, I've led through emergencies and the aftermaths that rarely make the headlines. I've seen both the resilience of communities and the dysfunction of the systems meant to support them. But I've also seen what's possible: meeting disasters with equity, speed, and local innovation. When the fires hit, I led a coalition of local partners alongside former Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs, founder of End Poverty in California, and my team at FORWARD, launched the Dena Care Collective, a new disaster response approach. The Dena Care Collective is providing over $1 million in direct cash assistance to Altadena families left behind by traditional disaster systems, helping them rebuild quickly, with dignity, and without red tape. We've also empowered additional relief efforts to quickly administer emergency funding to local families, including the Los Angeles Unified School District Education Foundation fund. This model offers valuable lessons that other communities can learn from, especially as disasters become more severe and frequent. Recognizing that even well-intentioned systems can be slow and inaccessible, we built a single-entry platform that scales, reduces delays, and improves outcomes. Families could check their status with one click, and funds were delivered within days—restoring trust and transparency. But our national model isn't just outdated—it's inequitable. Renters are overlooked. Small business owners are told to wait. Low-income families don't have the luxury to process their grief or process their loss while navigating disparate systems not designed for them. Data shows that underserved neighborhoods often receive less FEMA funding than wealthier areas. But when recovery systems leave people behind, everyone pays the price. According to the National Institute of Building Sciences, every $1 spent on disaster mitigation saves an average of $6 in future disaster-related losses. Faster aid strengthens local economies and protects long-term health and safety. We can't continue to accept the status quo. Apathy is both costly to families and expensive to taxpayers. Communities everywhere can adopt the same principles: lean into local leadership, integrate smart technology, embed equity, mandate efficiency from the start. Real-time data can help identify households with the greatest need, while community-based partnerships ensure that aid reaches people in culturally competent and efficient ways. That's what responsive recovery looks like. Technology alone isn't enough. This model succeeds because it combines tech with deep community relationships. In Altadena, community-based organizations were essential to delivering personalized support that addressed immediate needs while installing critical infrastructure to support long-term recovery: mental health, housing, and more. This approach addresses the short-term crisis and builds long-term resilience, necessary in an era of ever-worsening climate disasters. These outcomes resulted from strong partnerships between civic groups, governments, technologists, and philanthropic organizations. In the case of the Dena Care Collective, relationships across civic groups, technologists, and funders like the California Community Foundation delivered critical support to unlock smart, accessible, and integrated community infrastructure. The takeaway here is simple: empower local networks, leverage technology for efficiency, unlock data-informed investments and always center the needs of those most affected. To be clear: this is not about placing blame on any one institution. Governments and nonprofits are doing the best they can with the tools they have. But the truth is, those tools are too often outdated, underfunded, or misaligned with community realities. Without reform, those tools will fail the people they're meant to serve. States and cities don't have to wait for federal reform. But agencies like FEMA and HUD must also evolve to support faster, locally led models that center equity, especially as we face what could be one of the most destructive hurricane seasons in recent memory. They can start by investing in integrated technology that unlocks communication, resource administration, economies of scale and real-time data tracking. Critics may call this approach expensive. The reality is that technology innovation has made data accessible and equity possible. Gone are the days when antiquated approaches are the only approaches. Data gaps, inaccessibility, and disparate systems delay recovery, strain community ecosystems, and decimate local economies, not to mention eroding public trust. When families stay housed, healthy, and financially stable, entire communities thrive. Our current system isn't built for the people who need it most. We must design recovery that actually serves them: by cutting delays, removing barriers, and investing in trusted local networks. We don't need to start from scratch. It's time to fix what's broken and scale what's working. As climate disasters become more frequent and severe, recovery must be fast, fair, and led by the people who know their communities best. Aja Brown is a civic tech strategist and former mayor of Compton, now serving as strategic impact partner at FORWARD. She works at the intersection of government, equity, and technology to design systems that deliver public resources more effectively to the communities that need them most. The views in this article are the writer's own.

Juniper Fire in California Prompts Evacuation Order
Juniper Fire in California Prompts Evacuation Order

New York Times

time30-06-2025

  • Climate
  • New York Times

Juniper Fire in California Prompts Evacuation Order

About 5,000 residents of Riverside County, Calif., east of Los Angeles, were under an evacuation order on Monday because of a quickly spreading wildfire, the authorities said. The blaze, called the Juniper fire, began just before 11:30 a.m. on Monday and swiftly burned more than 600 acres, according to Cal Fire, the state's firefighting agency. The cause of the fire, which was burning about 70 miles southeast of central Los Angeles, was still being investigated, the agency said. The evacuation orders, which were issued in the afternoon, affect just over 5,000 residents of Riverside County, based on a New York Times analysis of the evacuation zones and LandScan population data. The fire is in an unincorporated county area west of the city of Perris, according to the Riverside County Fire Department. A spokesman for the city of Perris referred inquiries to the Fire Department. The Juniper fire is one of three blazes in Riverside County that local officials are trying to contain. The Wolf fire, which began on Sunday, has burned more than 1,400 acres. The authorities reported that it was 10 percent contained as of Monday afternoon. The Mindy fire, which also began on Sunday, was mostly contained after burning about 100 acres, and all evacuation orders associated with it have been lifted. Summer is typically the worst season for wildfires in California, as the atmosphere dries up and temperatures rise. Though it can be difficult to predict wildfire activity, forecasters have already seen signs that this could be an especially intense year, with plenty of dry grass to fuel potential fires. In Southern California, conditions were especially dry this winter, setting the stage for more and larger fires this summer. On average, about 1.4 million acres burn a year in California, but there have been varying totals in recent years. More than 4.3 million acres burned in 2020, when dry lightning — lightning without nearby rainfall — sparked an outbreak of wildfires across Northern California, but in 2022 and 2023, only about 300,000 acres burned each year. Amy Graff and John Keefe contributed reporting.

Juniper Fire in Riverside County quickly burns more than 500 acres, prompts evacuation orders
Juniper Fire in Riverside County quickly burns more than 500 acres, prompts evacuation orders

CBS News

time30-06-2025

  • Climate
  • CBS News

Juniper Fire in Riverside County quickly burns more than 500 acres, prompts evacuation orders

A quickly growing fire in Riverside County torched more than 500 acres of land and prompted evacuation orders on Monday, according to authorities. Dubbed the Juniper Fire, it was initially reported at 11:28 a.m. in unincorporated parts of Perris, near the area of Idaleona and Juniper roads, Cal Fire said. As of an update provided at 1:56 p.m., the fire burned about 560 acres. In that same update, officials said that 183 total personnel were battling the fire. Images captured by SKYCal showed at least one structure burning and several horses escaping the flames. The fire also appeared to be traveling up and down a hill. The Juniper Fire in Riverside County burned about 560 acres by Monday afternoon. Cal Fire said it was growing at a "critical rate of speed." No injuries were reported as of 1:56 p.m. Evacuations The Juniper Fire in Riverside County burned about 560 acres by Monday afternoon. The zones in red were under evacuation orders, while the zones in yellow were under evacuation warnings as of 2:07 p.m. Cal Fire Mandatory evacuations were ordered in the following perimeter: North of Rocky Hills West of Forrest Road East of El Nido Road South of Orange Avenue Evacuation warnings were made within the following perimeter: North of Eucalyptus West of Highway 74 East of Post Road South of Ellis Avenue An evacuation map can be found here. Santa Rosa Mine Road is closed between Juniper Road and Post Road

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store