Program Contact
Katherine Siegel
katherine.j.siegel@colorado.edu
Wildland-urban interface (WUI) communities (residences intermingle with or are adjacent to wildland vegetation) in the western US have experienced rapid population growth and destructive wildfires in recent years. In Boulder County, the 2021 Marshall Fire tragically illustrated the need for policies and investments to mitigate wildfire risk and help communities adapt to wildfire. However, Boulder County’s WUI communities are not homogeneous, and the principle of social equity must be embedded into wildfire mitigation and adaptation. Working with community partners, we will examine how two dimensions of social equity – procedural equity and recognitional equity – played out in the recent process of updating Boulder County’s Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP). We focus on western Boulder County due to its heightened wildfire vulnerability.
Community Workshop
Additional Info
Public workshop where we share the results of our survey and interviews, validate our results through feedback from community members, and facilitate a discussion as to how our findings can inform the implementation of Boulder County’s new CWPP and allocation of funds for wildfire mitigation and adaptation.
Location
on campus
Dates
Ongoing
Public or Private
Public Program (open to the public)
Program Fee
No charge to attend/participate in activity or program
Sponsoring Units
Research Institutes
- Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES)
Program Partners
- Colorado State Forest Service
- Boulder Community Risk Reduction Services
- Wildfire Partners
- Northern Colorado Fireshed Collaborative
- The Nature Conservancy
Audiences Served
- General Public
- Government
- Historically Excluded/Marginalized/Non-dominant Group(s)
- Manufactured Homes/ Mobile Home Communities
- People With Disabilities
- Rural Communities
- Senior Citizens