Joint Chiefs' for Los Pasdres Fuelbreak
Overview
The United States Forest Service (USFS) and the NRCS have entered into a multi-year partnership to improve the health and resiliency of forest ecosystems where public and private lands meet across the nation. By leveraging technical and financial resources and coordinating activities on adjacent public and private lands, conservation work by NRCS and USFS will be more efficient and effective in these watersheds. Reducing forest fuels will provide additional protection for community safety, wildlife habitat, watershed health, recreation opportunities and cultural resources.
The conservation goals and funding priorities for the Joint Chiefs’ Initiative for Los Padres Fuelbreak is to promote community wildfire protection and assist in the restoration of ecological process on non-industrial private forestland within Monterey County.
Funding has been made available for a 3-year period, 2020, 2021 and 2022 fiscal years, to install forestry and fuel load management practices on private lands to re-establish historic fuelbreaks and complete vegetation management treatments.
The wildland-urban interface communities of Big Sur, Palo Colorado, Cachagua, Jamesburg, Carmel Valley Highlands and several smaller communities and neighborhoods considered communities-at-risk are priorities areas expected to benefit from conservation treatments on non-industrial private forestlands.
The California NRCS State Conservationist has determined that the geographic scope of a Forest Management Plan and nonindustrial private forest land does not include areas within 100 feet from a permitted structure or a greater distance if required by state law, or local ordinance, rule or regulation.
The following sections include the applicable land uses, resource concerns, and conservation practices for the ranking pool.
Land Uses
The descriptions below are the general NRCS land use definitions - applications should fit within, but do not need to exactly match, these descriptions. Below are the applicable land uses for this ranking pool.
- Forest: Land on which the primary vegetation is tree cover (climax, natural or introduced plant community) and use is primarily for production of wood products or non-timber forest products.
- Associated Agricultural Lands: Land associated with farms and ranches that are not purposefully managed for food, forage, or fiber and are typically associated with nearby production or conservation lands. This could include incidental areas, such as odd areas, ditches and watercourses, riparian areas, field edges, seasonal and permanent wetlands, and other similar areas.
Resource Concerns
The goal of conservation planning is to help each client attain sustainable use and sound management of soil, water, air, plant, animal, and energy resources, based on related human considerations (SWAPAE+H). Below is a list of priority resource concerns for this ranking pool.
SWAPAE+H
|
Resource Concern Category
|
Resource Concern
|
Soil
|
Concentrated Erosion
|
Bank erosion from streams, shorelines or water conveyance channels
|
Water
|
Field, Sediment, Nutrient, and Pathogen Loss
|
Sediment transported to surface water
|
Plants
|
Degraded Plant Condition
|
Plant productivity and health
|
Plant structure and composition
|
Pest Pressure
|
Plant pest pressure
|
Fire Management
|
Wildfire hazard from biomass accumulation
|
Conservation Practices
NRCS conservation practices eligible for financial assistance through this ranking pool are listed in the below table. For more information about NRCS conservation practices visit the following website link: http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detail/national/technical/?cid=NRCSDEV11_001020.
Practice Code
|
Conservation Practice Name
|
Practice Units
|
Lifespan (Years)
|
106
|
Forest Management Plan – Written
|
no
|
1
|
112
|
Prescribed Burning Plan – Written
|
no
|
1
|
314
|
Brush Management
|
ac
|
10
|
315
|
Herbaceous Weed Treatment
|
ac
|
5
|
338
|
Prescribed Burning
|
ac
|
1
|
383
|
Fuel Break
|
ac
|
10
|
384
|
Woody Residue Treatment
|
ac
|
10
|
394
|
Firebreak
|
ft
|
5
|
410
|
Grassed Waterway
|
ac
|
10
|
490
|
Tree/Shrub Site Preparation
|
ac
|
1
|
578
|
Stream Crossing
|
no
|
10
|
612
|
Tree/Shrub Establishment
|
ac
|
15
|
654
|
Road/Trail/Landing Closure and Treatment
|
ft
|
10
|
655
|
Forest Trails and Landings
|
ft
|
5
|
660
|
Tree/Shrub Pruning
|
ac
|
10
|
666
|
Forest Stand Improvement
|
ac
|
10
|
Interested Applicants
For more information about EQIP, how to apply and program eligibility, interested applicants should contact a NRCS field office in the county which you own land or where you have an agricultural operation.
Visit https://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/ to find the NRCS representative for your county.