News Warner Logo

News Warner

LA fires showed how much neighborliness matters for wildfire safety

LA fires showed how much neighborliness matters for wildfire safety

  • LA fires highlighted the importance of neighborliness for wildfire safety, showing how community support can help prevent fires from spreading and save lives.
  • The recovery process has led to calls for improvements in zoning regulations, building codes, insurance, and emergency communications systems, but also emphasizes the need for individual actions on property to reduce fire risk.
  • Building a safer future for fire-risk communities requires increasing neighborliness and shared knowledge of the past, starting in schools, where community-wide fire mitigation strategies and ecological knowledge can be taught.
  • Fire education should include knowledge from Indigenous tribal elders, fire management professionals, and other community members to provide robust understanding of fire risk and roles in risk reduction, as well as introducing students to future career pathways in fire safety.
  • Remembering the past is crucial for preparing for future fires, as a “reflexive amnesia” regarding natural disasters can lead to complacency and increased disaster risk; teaching lessons about wildfire causes, preparedness, and resilience in K-12 classrooms can help lower disaster risk.

Eaton fire survivors gather in Altadena, Calif., to talk about recovery six months after the LA fires. Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images

On Jan. 7, 2025, people across the Los Angeles area watched in horror as powerful winds began spreading wildfires through neighborhood after neighborhood. Over three weeks, the fires destroyed more than 16,000 homes and businesses. At least 31 people died, and studies suggest the smoke and stress likely contributed to hundreds more deaths.

For many of us who lived through the fires, it was a traumatic experience that also brought neighborhoods closer together. Neighbors scrambled to help each other as burning embers started spot fires that threatened homes. They helped elderly and disabled residents evacuate.

A man turns a hose on a burning house while another runs.

Samuel Girma runs to get another hose as he and others try to stop the Eaton fire from spreading to more homes in Altadena, Calif. Girma was in the area on a construction job. The other man lives nearby.
Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

As the LA region rebuilds a year later, many people are calling for improvements to zoning regulations, building codes, insurance and emergency communications systems. Conversations are underway about whether rebuilding in some locations makes sense at all.

But managing fire risk is about more than construction practices, regulations and rules. It is also about people and neighborliness – the ethos and practice of caring for those in your community, including making choices and taking steps on your own property to help keep the people around you safe.

Three men, one an older man, stand in the still-smoky ruins of what was once a home, with fire damage all around them.

Neighbors who lost their homes to a fire in Altadena, Calif., on Jan. 9, 2025, talk amid the ruins.
Zoë Meyers/AFP via Getty Images

As LA-area residents and historians who witnessed the fires’ destruction and have been following the recovery closely, we believe building a safer future for fire-risk communities includes increasing neighborliness and building shared knowledge of the past. Much of that starts in the schools.

Neighborliness matters in community fire safety

Being neighborly means recognizing the connectedness of life and addressing the common good, beyond just the individual and family network.

It includes community-wide fire mitigation strategies that can help prevent fires from spreading.

During the Southern California fires, houses, fences, sheds, roofs and dry vegetation served as the fuel for wind-blown fires racing through neighborhoods miles away from forested land. Being neighborly means taking steps to reduce risks on your own property that could put your neighbors at risk. Following fire officials’ recommendations can mean clearing defensible space around homes, replacing fire-prone plants and limiting or removing burnable material, such as wood fencing and sheds.

A woman closes her eyes as she hugs her cat.

Denise Johnson holds her cat Ramsey after the Eaton Fire. Her home was one of the few in her immediate neighborhood that survived, but recovery will take time for everyone.
AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

Neighborliness also recognizes the varying mental health impacts of significant wildfire events on the people who experience them. Being neighborly means listening to survivors and reaching out, particularly to neighbors who may be struggling or need help with recovery, and building community bonds.

Neighbors are often the first people who can help in an emergency before local, state and federal responders arrive. A fast neighborhood response, whether helping put out spot fires on a lawn or ensuring elderly residents or those without vehicles are able to evacuate, can save lives and property in natural disasters.

Fire awareness, neighborliness start in school

Community-based K-12 schools are the perfect places for learning and practicing neighborliness and providing transformative fire education.

Learning about the local history of wildfires, from the ecological impact of beneficial fire to fire disasters and how communities responded, can transform how children and their families think about fires and fire readiness.

However, in our view, fire history and safety is not currently taught nearly enough, even in fire-prone California.

A man pushes an older woman in a shopping cart along a pathway with apartments on one side and sand on the other, and thick smoke behind them.

Jerome Krausse pushes his mother-in-law in a shopping cart on a path along the beach as they evacuate amid fires in Pacific Palisades on Jan. 7, 2025.
AP Photo/Richard Vogel

California’s Department of Education Framework and Content Standards for K-12 education offer several opportunities to engage students with innovative lessons about wildfire causes, preparedness and resilience. For example, fourth grade history and social science standards include understanding “how physical environments (e.g., water, landforms, vegetation, climate) affect human activity.” Middle school science standards include mapping the history of natural hazards, though they only mention forest fires when discussing technology.

Schools could, and we believe should, include more fire history, ecological knowledge and understanding of the interconnectedness of neighborhoods and neighbors when it comes to fire safety in those and other classes.

Elementary schools in many states bring in firefighters to talk about fire safety, often through programs run by groups like the California Fire Prevention Organization. These efforts could spend more time looking beyond house fires to discuss how and where wildfires start, how they spread and how to make your own home and neighborhood much safer.

Models such as the U.S. Fire Administration’s collaboration with Sesame Workshop on the Sesame Street Fire Safety Program for preschool kids offer examples, blending catchy phrases with safety and science lessons.

The National Fire Protection Association’s Sparky the Fire Dog shares some simple steps that kids can do with their parents and friends to help keep their neighborhood safer from wildfire.

Including knowledge from Indigenous tribal elders, fire management professionals and other community members can provide more robust fire education and understanding of the roles people play in fire risk and risk reduction. Introducing students to future career pathways in fire safety and response can also help students see their roles in fire safety.

As LA recovers from the 2025 fires, fire-prone states can prepare for future fires by expanding education about fire and neighborliness, and helping students take that knowledge home to their families.

Remembering, because it will happen again

Neighborliness also demands a pivot from the reflexive amnesia regarding natural and unnatural disasters to knowing that it will happen here again.

There’s a dangerous, stubborn forgetfulness in the vaunted Land of Sunshine. It is all part of the myth that helped make Southern California such a juggernaut of growth from the late 19th century forward.

The region was, boosters and public officials insisted, special: a civilization growing in the benign embrace of the environment. Anything grew here, the endless Los Angeles Basin could absorb everyone, and if there wasn’t enough water to slake the thirst of metropolitan ambitions, engineers and taxpayers would see to it that water from far away – even very far away – would be brought here.

The Southland is beautiful, but a place can be both beautiful and precarious, particularly in the grip of climate change. These are lessons we believe should be taught in K-12 classrooms as an important step toward lowering disaster risk. Living with fire means remembering and understanding the past. That knowledge, and developing more neighborly behavior, can save your life and the lives of your neighbors.

The Conversation

Elizabeth A. Logan receives funding from the Sierra Nevada Conservancy and the WHH Foundation.

William Deverell receives funding from the Sierra Nevada Conservancy and the WHH Foundation.

link

Q. What was the impact of the LA fires on the community?
A. The LA fires destroyed over 16,000 homes and businesses, and at least 31 people died, with studies suggesting that smoke and stress likely contributed to hundreds more deaths.

Q. How did neighbors help each other during the LA fires?
A. Neighbors scrambled to help each other as burning embers started spot fires that threatened homes, and they helped elderly and disabled residents evacuate.

Q. What are some ways that neighborliness can help with fire safety?
A. Being neighborly means recognizing the connectedness of life and addressing the common good, taking steps to reduce risks on your own property, and listening to survivors and reaching out to neighbors who may be struggling or need help with recovery.

Q. Why is it important to teach fire history and safety in schools?
A. Fire history and safety are not currently taught nearly enough, even in fire-prone California, and learning about the local history of wildfires can transform how children and their families think about fires and fire readiness.

Q. What role do community-based K-12 schools play in teaching neighborliness and fire education?
A. Community-based K-12 schools are the perfect places for learning and practicing neighborliness and providing transformative fire education, including lessons on local history, ecological knowledge, and understanding of the interconnectedness of neighborhoods and neighbors.

Q. How can schools incorporate more fire history and ecological knowledge into their curriculum?
A. Schools could include more fire history, ecological knowledge, and understanding of the interconnectedness of neighborhoods and neighbors in various classes, such as fourth-grade history and social science standards and middle school science standards.

Q. What is the importance of including Indigenous tribal elders, fire management professionals, and other community members in fire education?
A. Including knowledge from these sources can provide more robust fire education and understanding of the roles people play in fire risk and risk reduction.

Q. How can students take what they learn about fire safety and neighborliness home to their families?
A. Students can share what they learn with their parents and friends, and help them understand how to make their own homes and neighborhoods safer from wildfires.

Q. Why is it important for communities to remember that natural disasters will happen again?
A. Remembering the past and understanding the risks of natural disasters can help communities prepare and respond more effectively in the future, and can save lives and property.

Q. What role do community-based programs and initiatives play in teaching fire safety and neighborliness?
A. Community-based programs and initiatives, such as those run by the California Fire Prevention Organization, can provide valuable opportunities for students to learn about fire safety and neighborliness, and help them develop more robust knowledge and skills.