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Fire season in Southern California is just beginning.
Fire season in Southern California is just beginning. (Photo: Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty)

Fact-Checking Trump’s Tweets on the California Fires

Has Governor Gavin Newsom done a bad job managing the wildfires? Should he invest in "cleaning" the forest? We've got answers.

Published: 
Fire season in Southern California is just beginning.
(Photo: Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty)

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On Sunday, while Southern California鈥檚 wildland firefighters dug line on the 10,000-acre Maria Fire and residents returned to their homes following mandatory evacuations, President Trump exercised his thumbs.听

Gavin Newsom, the new Democratic governor of California, was quick to respond. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 believe in climate change. You are excused from this conversation,鈥 Newsome . Later, his office released a longer : 鈥淲e鈥檙e successfully waging war against thousands of fires started across the state in the last few weeks due to extreme weather created by climate change while Trump is conducting a full on assault against the antidotes.鈥

Fire season in Southern California is just beginning. The crucible of heat, dryness, and extreme winds that sparked hundreds of fires over the course of weeks is likely to continue through December. According to the latest National Interagency Coordination Center鈥檚 , the causes are above-normal temperatures; decreased rainfall; strong winds whipped up by a 鈥渉ighly amplified鈥 stationary pressure ridge; and higher sea surface temperatures over the Pacific Ocean. Warm the planet and California will burn.

The roots of California鈥檚 ongoing struggles听with wildfire are enormously complex, even when they鈥檙e not politicized in a 140-word tweetstorm. People spend their lives studying these issues in order to understand them, and to explain them accurately to average Americans. I asked forestry scientists, environmental engineers, and emergency management experts to help fact check the President鈥檚 tweets. (The Department of the Interior could not be reached for comment.)


“The Governor of California, @GavinNewsom, has done a terrible job of forest management”听

Purely , California has fared better against wildfires during Newsom鈥檚 first year in office than it has for the past several years. In 2019, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection听has responded to 6,190 fires that have burned 198,392 acres across the state. By this time last year, 5,355 fires had burned 632,701 acres, an area roughly the size of Rhode Island. The five-year average from January 1 to November 3 has been 5,382 fires burning 373,576 acres.

, three people have been killed by wildfires, and 22 have been injured. In 2018, perhaps the worst fire year on record, 93 people died; at least 80 people were injured. Still, the worst may听be yet to come in 2019.

In March 2019, , months before wildfire season started. In October, that fund and improve 鈥渨ildfire prevention, mitigation, and response,鈥 and pledged $21 billion to help update utilities that have sparked some of the state鈥檚 largest fires. He even for its role in helping fight the largest wildfires in the state.

Still, Newsom is just part of the bigger picture. 鈥淢ost of the forests in California are owned by the federal government,鈥 said , a professor of forest ecology at the University of Washington. 鈥淭he state controls a relatively small amount of land. The governor has nothing to do with how those federal lands are managed.鈥

Indeed, 57 percent of California鈥檚 33 million acres is managed by the federal government. , the total acreage burned in the state was almost perfectly split: 124,280 acres burned were federal, 126,069 were state.听


“I told him from the first day we met that he must 'clean' his forest floors regardless of what his bosses, the environmentalists, DEMAND of him. Must also do burns and cut fire stoppers.”听

Trump鈥檚 talking about his widely panned after the 2018 Paradise fire to 鈥渢ake care of the floors of the forest鈥 and to start 鈥渞aking and cleaning and doing things鈥 in order to prevent more fires.

鈥淭rump got it partly right,鈥 said Timothy Ingalsbee, a former wildland firefighter with a P.h.D. in environmental sociology and the founder of, a fire policy advocacy group. 鈥淢uch of the problem stems from past fire exclusion鈥濃攏ot letting natural fires burn鈥斺渁nd excess dead and down fuel.鈥 Allowing fires to burn naturally, the idea goes, will eliminate excess fuel and keep fires from burning larger and hotter.

However, in Germany and several other nations that tried this extensive 鈥渃leaning鈥 technique in the past, the massive amounts of work to literally cart away dead limbs throughout a forest wasn鈥檛 sustainable. Beside the enormous effort and cost, the Germans 鈥渞ealized they were just carting away all the nutrients the forest needed,鈥 Ingalsbee said.

Peterson noted that federal budgets are so small for the American version of this type of thing鈥攔emoving surface fuels via controlled burns and thinning dense forests via logging so that fires can鈥檛 reach their crown鈥攖hat only 10 to 15 percent of lands that need it get it. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the elephant in the room. We know what we need to do, and that it works. But we just don鈥檛 have the money.鈥

Both Ingalsbee and Peterson also noted that many of California鈥檚 worst fires have burned in brushy grassland, not forests.

鈥淎s for the environmentalists,鈥 said Ingalsbee, 鈥淚鈥檇 hardly say that we鈥檙e his bosses. In fact, we have a real hard time getting any of our demands implemented.鈥


“Every year, as the fire鈥檚 rage & California burns, it is the same thing-and then he comes to the Federal Government for $$$ help.”听

In 2017, California fighting wildfires; 2018 cost even more. The federal government refunds up to 75 percent of firefighting funds for the largest fires. ( about a year ago that he would pull funding to California鈥檚 wildfire problem if they didn鈥檛 鈥渞emedy鈥 their 鈥減oor鈥 forest management.) This year, the Trump administration has made federal funds available to help fight several of California鈥檚 biggest fires. Trump appears to also be talking about Federal Emergency Management Aid disaster recovery funding; early in 2019, in grants to help Californians affected by wildfire.听

Last year, Congress passed a spending bill authorizing upwards of $2 billion in suppression funds to be used fighting wildfires, and which allows the Forest Service to tap into FEMA funds to fight fires. This sounds like progress. But maybe not. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge waste of money in my opinion,鈥 said Ingalsbee. 鈥淏etter to spend that money on preventing burning, or helping people recover from burning. Hurling firefighters into the maw of these climate-driven wildfires is just burning cash. At some point the well will run dry.鈥


“No more.”听

Though Trump has made it before, this is a serious threat. The ecosystem of emergency preparedness, response, and recovery for fires in California鈥攍ike in many other states鈥攊s organized around federal funding. Local, county, and state governments rely on federal funding to save the day when things get especially bad. It鈥檚 unclear whether Trump can legally turn the money faucet off. But if he does, losing federal funding would be devastating.

鈥淚n order to punish Gavin Newsom and Democratic policies, Trump is punishing the whole state,鈥 said Ingalsbee. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 90 million citizens. And this is not just a California thing. It鈥檚 a national mobilization. The impacts will ripple out across the West, across the rest of the nation.鈥


“You don鈥檛 see close to the level of burn in other states.”听

鈥淭hat鈥檚 not true at all,鈥 said Ingalsbee. 鈥淚t鈥檚 true that California fires cause tremendous social costs. Homes burned, civilians killed. But we鈥檙e seeing very large fires all across the West.鈥

By October 1, had burned in Alaska in 2019, dwarfing California鈥檚 wildfire acreage.听

Last year, California had by far the most acres burned, according to the , with 1.8 million acres burned. But other states also endured massive fires. In Idaho, 600,000 acres burned; nearly 500,000 burned in Colorado; 410,000 burned in Alaska.

California is unique among those states because of its Mediterranean climate鈥攊t鈥檚 extremely dry in the summer, and especially fire prone. 鈥淭hat has nothing to do with how its lands are managed,鈥 Peterson said. 鈥淭he fires are totally dependent on extreme weather events that occur.鈥


鈥淎lso, open up the ridiculously closed water lanes coming down from the North. Don鈥檛 pour it out into the Pacific Ocean. Should be done immediately. California desperately needs water, and you can have it now!鈥

鈥淭hese fires are not caused or exacerbated by the operation of the large water systems,鈥 said , a professor of civil and environmental engineering at UC Davis. 鈥淎nd firefighters have not had a shortage of water.鈥

鈥淩ivers have absolutely nothing to do with wildfires,鈥 confirmed Peterson. 鈥淲ildfires have to do with three factors: sufficient flammable fuels, hot dry weather, and an ignition source.

鈥淗ere鈥檚 what everyone needs to know: wherever people live in fire-prone areas, they need to learn how to live with fire. There鈥檚 no easy fix here. We have to make communities more fire safe, and have evacuation plans, and we need to have structures that are resistant to fire. This is not something the government is going to save people from.鈥

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