The McConnell Foundation has been awarded a large grant from FEMA and Cal OES to mitigate wildfire impacts around the communities of Weaverville, Covington Mill, and Trinity Center. Trinity County Resource Conservation District is steering the implementation of this project.

Hazardous fuel reduction will be provided at no cost to eligible landowners. The registration deadline has now passed.

The goal of the Project is to reduce risk of wildfire along certain critical corridors within high-priority wildland urban interface (WUI) areas by reducing hazardous fuels. The first phase of the Project requires a preliminary site assessment to determine the potential boundaries of the Project area. Site assessments will determine where fuel treatments can take place and will take into consideration environmental constraints, topography, fuel types, and fuel loading relative to beneficial outcomes. The McConnell Foundation and Trinity County Resource Conservation District may wish to enter onto your land as part of that preliminary site assessment to determine the locations and extent of the proposed fuel reduction treatments, if any, to be conducted. Community outreach events will also take place during this phase to inform landowners of Project goals, specific implementation procedures, and Project locations. Phase 1 will begin in November 2022 and take approximately 6 months.

The second phase of the Project will be removal of hazardous fuels. Before any hazardous fuels reduction work begins, landowners will approve a site-specific work plan that details the locations and specifications of any fuel treatments and treatment boundaries will be marked. Archaeological, botanical, and wildlife surveys will also take place prior to treatment. Each landowner will have the opportunity to meet with a professional experienced in hazard fuel reduction before any vegetation removal and treatment is conducted on their property. Phase 2 will begin in approximately 12 months after Phase 1 and last approximately 36 months.

Project Area

Participation map: registered parcels are shown in green. If you believe you registered but your parcel is not shown in green, please call Adriana Rodriguez at (530) 623-6004 ext.224.

https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/236169f574554c79a543ac8a098e2990/?draft=true&org=TrinityFriends

Eligible neighborhoods include:

  • Weaverville area: Timber Ridge, Upper Little Browns Creek (past the SPI gate), Tye Lane, Democrat Gulch
  • Covington Mill: Long Canyon, Strope Creek, Lake Forest Estates, Greenhorn Drive, Millview Drive, Guy Covington Drive, and Grizzly Lane.
  • Trinity Center: Swift Creek, Gratten Flat, Rancheria Rd, Norwegian Ranch, Northwoods Estates, and Trinity Lake Knolls.

The following maps show the boundaries of the project area. If you are unsure if you fall within the project boundaries, contact Bethany Llewellyn at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.@tcrcd.net or (530) 623-6004 ext. 220 with your parcel number.

 

North Lake project Area Overviews

Weaverville project Area Overviews

 

Information for participating landowners:

 

Why is fuel reduction important?

Fire in California wildlands is a natural occurrence, but due to past land management and fire suppression practices, the intensity, rate of spread, and land area burned in high-severity fires have increased over the last century. Scientific studies and historical accounts have revealed that vegetation composition and forest structure has changed dramatically over the last century in northern California, resulting in much less fire-resilient landscapes. 100 years ago, the trees were much more spaced out, and there were older, larger trees in the forests with a primary understory of low vegetation, like perennial bunchgrass. Fire historically passed through Trinity County forests about every 3-12 years. Without restoration of the historical vegetation composition, structures and ecosystems in the wildland-urban interface (the zone where communities and wildlands intersect) are now threatened by catastrophic wildfires due to current hazardous fuel conditions.

 

 

Hazardous Fuel Reduction: Focus of this Project

Fuel reduction aims to reduce the continuity of fuels outside the defensible space zone in order to prevent surface fires from becoming high intensity, high severity crown fires. It involves reducing ladder and surface fuels as well as crown density by spacing trees and shrubs vertically and horizontally

Strategically placed fuel treatments not only protect communities but also can protect the surrounding environment from human-caused fires initiating in the wildland-urban interface and spreading to the surrounding ecosystems. Fuel reduction protects homes and the natural spaces that are valued by residents. Ecological benefits include controlling undesirable vegetation such as invasive species, improvement of wildlife habitat and rangeland for grazing, and protection of wetlands and riparian corridors.

 

The RCD Project Tracker map showcases conservation projects, key accomplishments, and funding information for select projects implemented by the Trinity County Resource Conservation District, including (but not limited to) rural roads, forest health & water quality improvement projects. For more information, click on the map below.

The map displays the Organization boundary, and the locations of any active Projects and Proposals that have spatial data.

Please use the form below or download this pdf Form print and mail it to us at:
Trinity County R.C.D. PO Box 1450, Weaverville, CA 96093-1450

Please use the form below or download this pdf Form, fill it out and email it to us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or print and mail it to us at:
Trinity County R.C.D. PO Box 1450, Weaverville, CA 96093-1450

Free technical and financial assistance for conservation practices on your land.


 

Molly Breitmün, TCRCD Conservation Planner, is partnering with the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Weaverville Field Office team to help interested Trinity County residents apply for participation in NRCS financial assistance programs.

Molly and the NRCS team provide free technical assistance and can help you with the application process for NRCS financial assistance programs you might be eligible for.  

Did you know?

  • There is no minimum land size
  • You can be an owner or leaser of the land
  • You do not have to be a ‘farmer’ to be eligible: Land with valid natural resource concerns are considered. For example, some participating Trinity County residents are focused on improving their forest’s health or post-fire disaster recovery.

NRCS Financial Assistance Programs: NRCS helps people improve the health of their land while protecting natural resources –soil, water, air, plants and animals- for the future.

Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP)

EQIP is a cost-share program to help people pay for conservation practices on their land to address natural resource concerns. If selected for a contract, participants can implement or pay to have someone implement the practices. After completion, participants can receive from 50-75% in reimbursement for implementing the conservation practices agreed upon. Historically underserved customers can be reimbursed up to 90% for implementation.

Examples of projects included but not limited to:

  • Post fire disaster assistance: cleanup of woody residue after salvage logging
  • Soil stabilization
  • Wildlife habitat enhancement
  • Water conservation: irrigation, water storage
  • Forest health/future fire resilience: thinning, planting trees

EQIP overview: https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/main/ca/programs/financial/eqip/

Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP)

The Conservation Stewardship Program helps people maintain and improve their existing conservation systems and adopt additional conservation activities to address priority resources concerns. Participants earn CSP payments for conservation performance - the higher the performance, the higher the payment. Typically, CSP participants start as EQIP clients first.

CSP overview: https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/main/ca/programs/financial/csp/

To get started: Fill out an Interest Form today! Please email the completed form to Chris Reisinger at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or mail to the NRCS Weaverville Field Office, PO Box 970 Weaverville, CA 96093.


Keep up to date with the District and our conservation efforts:

 

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