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Oregon emergency officials look to 2020 wildfires for lessons learned�

State report makes recommendations to prepare Oregon for the next disaster, wildfire or otherwise

Oregon emergency officials look to 2020 wildfires for lessons learned�
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This story originally appeared in the Oregon Capital Chronicle and is republished here under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. Read more stories at oregoncapitalchronicle.com.

The 2020 Labor Day wildfires strained understaffed state and local agencies and highlighted a need for more communication so people can recover and access services, the Oregon Department of Emergency Management concluded in a report released Thursday.

The 147-page report, based on surveys and interviews, offers a window into the states work to recover from the wildfires that scorched an area the size of Rhode Island and left communities across the state reeling as thousands of Oregonians lost homes, jobs and their way of life. It detailed shortcomings in the states response and included suggestions so officials can better prepare for the next disaster that strikes Oregon.

The wide-ranging report includes examinations of  how homeowners received financial assistance for their damaged houses, private fundraising and efforts to provide battered communities with drinking water.

The 2020 wildfires scorched more than 1 million acres in 20 counties, destroyed or damaged more than 5,000 buildings and inflicted more than $500 million of damages across the state. That wildfire season was Oregons worst on record.

They coincided with  the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. The confluence of the pandemic and the wildfires partially shaped the states response, as officials from across different agencies coordinated virtually at times to share information and map out the recovery. In some cases that helped, but collaboration might have been quicker had agency members been able to meet in person instead of relying on emails and video calls, the report concluded.

Due to the scope of the disaster, more than $550 million has poured into Oregon through Federal Emergency Management Agency programs. That includes nearly $40 million for individual households in Oregon, much of it housing assistance.

The state Department of Emergency Management plays a key role in coordinating resources after disasters, a mammoth undertaking that can involve numerous state and local agencies, community organizations, nonprofits and shelters. The report will provide guidance as the state updates and revises its disaster recovery plan, a document that guides Oregons response for a variety of disasters, not just wildfires. That work will take months, but officials are already putting lessons learned into practice.

Now, for example, state officials monitor wildfires before they are within striking distance of populated areas so they can respond quicker if necessary.

Prior to 2020, we would wait for damages to take place, said Stan Thomas, OEM deputy director and Mitigation and Recovery Section Division director. Today we are tracking wildfires that are within what I would consider a fair distance of populated areas.

Report findings

The reports findings include:

Next steps moving forward

The report makes a variety of recommendations, including::

Challenges related to information-sharing also unfold on a national level during disasters, Thomas said, adding that there are ongoing efforts about how to centralize data collection.

That way, survivors wont need to repeat their accounts.

When a survivor talks to the Red Cross or a survivor talks to FEMA or a survivor talks to a state agency, those individual organizations cant share that personal information without written consent from the survivor, he said. We had so many organizations that were getting involved, what we ended up doing was the survivor had to repeat their story 20 times, which is not healthy for the survivor.

Thomas said the work of putting the recommendations and rewriting the states plan could take about a year and involve input from different agencies and people.

The plans are important to prepare Oregon for the next disaster and help communities be resilient, he said.

Another fire season like 2020 is possible, as is any other type of natural disaster, he said.

As we look to the future and we look at our climate changing, I think that we will have more disasters, and I think the disasters that we have will be more severe, he said. I dont want to look at the crystal ball and see dark skies. However, yes, we could have another straight line wind event and firestorm like we had in 2020. We could have more severe ice storms and winter storms.

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