Emergency managers’ challenges with wildfires and related cascading hazards in California

Ermagun, Alireza, Thompson, Diego, Vahedifard, Farshid and Cohen Silver, Roxane, (2025). Emergency managers’ challenges with wildfires and related cascading hazards in California. Journal of Environmental Management, 374 124008-n/a

Document type:
Article

Metadata
Links
Versions
Statistics
  • Sub-type Journal article
    Author Ermagun, Alireza
    Thompson, Diego
    Vahedifard, Farshid
    Cohen Silver, Roxane
    Title Emergency managers’ challenges with wildfires and related cascading hazards in California
    Appearing in Journal of Environmental Management
    Volume 374
    Publication Date 2025-02
    Place of Publication Amesterdam
    Publisher Elesevier B.V.
    Start page 124008
    End page n/a
    Language eng
    Abstract This study investigates the complexities faced by emergency managers in wildfire-prone areas to uncover pressing issues and potential solutions. Four themes are discerned through three focus group discussions with emergency managers from nine counties across California. First, there is unequal access to resources for both risk assessment and response, with counties that have fewer resources facing significant challenges in effectively managing wildfire risks. Second, effective risk communication depends on the available resources and the unique characteristics of each community. Participants stress the need for improved communication tools to reach vulnerable groups (e.g., seniors, individuals with disabilities, non-English-speaking residents). Third, the complexity and confusion surrounding multi-level collaboration in wildfire management is a recurring theme. Participants note that unclear roles and responsibilities between state and federal agencies hinder response efforts, underscoring the need for better coordination and transparent communication at all levels. Fourth, innovative responses (e.g., creative evacuation strategies, collaborative efforts) are recognized as imperative for managing wildfires and their cascading impacts in resource-constrained areas. The findings highlight that achieving equitable and effective preparation, response, and resilience for vulnerable communities requires a comprehensive understanding of wildfire severity and community susceptibility, coupled with active collaboration among emergency managers, policymakers, and both governmental and non-governmental organizations.
    Copyright Holder Elesevier
    Copyright Year 2025
    Copyright type All rights reserved
    DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.124008
  • Versions
    Version Filter Type
  • Citation counts
    Google Scholar Search Google Scholar
    Access Statistics: 0 Abstract Views  -  Detailed Statistics
    Created: Thu, 16 Jan 2025, 02:55:49 JST by Haideh Beigi on behalf of UNU INWEH