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Insight With Vicki Gonzalez

 

Hosted By Vicki Gonzalez

Award-winning journalist Vicki Gonzalez hosts interviews with community leaders, advocates, experts, artists and more to provide background and understanding on breaking news, big events, politics and culture in the Sacramento region and beyond.

Schedule

Monday – Thursday, 9 a.m. – 10 a.m.
on News Station

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Cal Fire Chief Ken Pimlott Retires

  •  Cody Drabble 
Thursday, December 13, 2018 | Sacramento, CA
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Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio

Retiring Cal Fire Chief Ken Pimlott

Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio

Cal Fire Chief Ken Pimlott announced he plans to retire this week after three decades of service. He joins Insight for an exit interview to reflect on one of the most devastating fire seasons in California.

Interview Highlights

On why we’re seeing fires like we’ve never seen before

The root is multi-pronged. And the reality is, we're coming off five years of drought. Vegetation is critically, critically parched, even with rainfall that we've had several winters — it hasn't changed the condition. Temperatures are changing. The weather patterns are changing. The climate is changing to where we're seeing different vegetation move into areas that historically weren't there. All of that's part of this changing landscape, and that's going to be real as we go forward. And so it's all the factors that we need to engage in to respond to this.

On the role of forest management in preventing megafires, in light of President Trump’s comments

Forest management is key. But it's really I call it sort of a three-legged stool. It's forest management, fire prevention, fuels treatment. Prescribed fire — absolutely need to increase the pace and scale. We need to be smart where we target that, where we leverage our funding and work on that. But it's about other factors too. It's fire prevention. It's education. It's land-use planning. It's ensuring that we're looking at what we're learning from these devastating fires in the built environment. And how do we work on those aspects as well.

Retiring Cal Fire Chief Ken Pimlott (left) and new Chief Mike Mohler (right)Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio

 

On what should be learned from fires like the Camp Fire in Butte County

The first six to 12 hours of the Camp Fire, firefighters were literally engaged in rescue. Firefighters, law enforcement, ordinary, regular civilians. We weren't engaging in the firefight. We were just literally pulling people out of harm's way. In many cases people couldn't evacuate because of the timing. And so they were sheltered in place in areas. Obviously many people died in that fire.

So we have to look at all of the factors that occurred in the Camp Fire and others and determine, can we learn things from this? We have very strict building codes in the urban interface in California. We've got to look to see, are there needs for improvement? We need to work together collectively between local government and the state and identify other areas that, again, we're going to build in these in these areas. But can we do it smartly? Are there areas that we know are just not defendable because they're fire prone? They're in canyons that are intensifying winds that just make it impossible to protect. So how can we look at development patterns and how can we look at ways to better protect these communities.

This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity. Click the “play” button to listen to the entire interview.

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    Retiring Cal Fire Director: California Must Mull Home Ban In Fire-Prone Areas

    Tuesday, December 11, 2018
    Cal Fire Director Ken Pimlott will leave his job Friday after 30 years with the agency. In an interview with The Associated Press, he said government and citizens must act differently to protect lives and property from fires.
  • Noah Berger / AP Photo

    Trump’s Overly Simplistic And False Claim On California’s Wildfires

    Tuesday, November 13, 2018
    As deadly wildfires forced more than a quarter million Californians to flee their homes, President Trump recently alleged the infernos are the result of nothing more than poor "forest management."

 wildfire

Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio

Cody Drabble

Former Insight Producer and On-Air Director

Cody Drabble learned to love public radio growing up in San Francisco with KQED on every morning during breakfast. In addition to producing and directing the live broadcast of Insight each morning, he also fills in as guest host for Beth Ruyak.   Read Full Bio 

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