Fuel break denudes slopes

Published: June 18, 2021, 3 p.m.

June 18, 2021 \u2014 Last month, PG&E cleared the vegetation on either side of its transmission lines for about two miles along Road A in Redwood Valley, from its substation to Highway 20. The clear cut area is up to 80 feet wide in some places, and traverses steep slopes and narrow canyons. \nThe work is in a public utility easement outside the coastal zone, and is exempt from county review, according to Planning and Building Services.\nPG&E spokeswoman Deanna Contreras said in an email that certified arborists communicated with every landowner along the line about the work, which she said did not affect old erosion caused by concentrated water from driveways and ditches. She did not respond to a question about how that assessment was made. Also, arborists are not trained to the level of registered professional foresters. \nThe company plans to mitigate the erosion with straw, waddles, and water bars. Most of the property owners did not agree to the use of herbicides, so the remaining stumps are expected to stabilize the soil. Contreras added that, \u201cFuel breaks created along transmission lines before and during active wildfires have been instrumental in preventing the advancement of wildfires throughout the state.\u201d\nBut Nancy Macy and Jeanne Wetzel Chinn disagree. They\u2019re members of the Sierra Club\u2019s utility wildfire prevention task force and two of the authors of a white paper on the harmful effects of PG&E\u2019s tree removal practices. \nThey say there are readily available technological fixes that would keep the trees in the ground, sequestering carbon and providing habitat for wildlife.