Fire Mitigation & Community Preparedness

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Protecting Our Mountain Community

Living in the mountains comes with both beauty and responsibility. The Pole Hill community exists within a high wildfire risk environment, making proactive wildfire mitigation one of our most important shared responsibilities. Through education, cooperation, and individual property stewardship, residents can significantly reduce wildfire risk and help protect homes, infrastructure, and access routes.

Wildfire mitigation is most effective when the entire community participates. Each property owner plays an important role in reducing fuels, maintaining defensible space, and supporting emergency access.


Why Fire Mitigation Matters

Wildfire mitigation helps:

• Protect homes and structures
• Improve firefighter safety and access
• Reduce the intensity and spread of wildfire
• Improve evacuation safety
• Help maintain insurability of mountain properties
• Strengthen long-term community resilience


Community Firewise Efforts

The Pole Hill community is actively working toward improving wildfire preparedness through community coordination, fuel reduction awareness, and participation in Firewise mitigation principles. These efforts help strengthen our ability to prepare for, respond to, and recover from wildfire events.


What Residents Can Do

Residents can help reduce wildfire risk by:

• Maintaining defensible space around structures
• Removing dead trees and ladder fuels
• Keeping driveways accessible for emergency vehicles
• Maintaining visible address markers
• Cleaning gutters and removing debris
• Storing firewood away from structures
• Creating emergency evacuation plans


Defensible Space Zones

Zone 1 (0–5 feet from structures)
Remove combustible materials and keep this area non-flammable.

Zone 2 (5–30 feet)
Reduce dense vegetation and space trees and shrubs.

Zone 3 (30–100+ feet)
Thin vegetation and remove dead fuels where possible.


Community Cooperation Matters

Wildfire mitigation is most effective when neighbors work together. A single untreated property can increase risk to surrounding homes, while coordinated mitigation can dramatically improve community safety.

Our goal is not perfection, but steady improvement through awareness and action.


Resources

Pinewood Lake Wildfire Action Group (PLWAG)

Loveland Fire Rescue Authority
Colorado State Forest Service
Firewise USA
Emergency preparedness guides


Pole Hill Community Commitment

Through communication and shared responsibility, the Pole Hill community continues to work toward improving wildfire preparedness, maintaining safe access routes, and protecting the mountain environment we all depend on.