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Portola Valley committee presses 100% Firewise goal, approves $3,000 outreach request
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Summary
The Portola Valley wildfire-preparedness committee set a goal of 100% Firewise enrollment, planned outreach events and mapping, and voted to request $3,000 from the town for community outreach and education.
The Portola Valley wildfire-preparedness committee advanced a townwide push to enroll all neighborhoods in Firewise programs and voted to request $3,000 from the town for community outreach at its April meeting.
Committee members outlined a multipronged outreach plan that includes promoting Ladera Firewise Day on May 9 (10 a.m.–2 p.m. at Ladera Recreation District, 150 Endeta Way), mailed and electronic newsletter blurbs, Zoom Q&A sessions for residents and recruitment of neighborhood block captains. "We have a goal of 100% Firewise," a committee member said, describing the target as both aspirational and a basis for recruiting block leaders.
The discussion ranged from practical vegetation controls to incentives and logistics. Members agreed that weed-whacking is a low-cost, high-impact action for many small lots, while larger-scale grazing with goats is expensive, exposes animals to predators and is feasible only on larger properties. The group also debated focusing on replacing combustible wooden structures within five feet of homes (fences, gates and trellises) versus promoting individual vendors, and stressed emphasizing education and code guidance alongside vendor options.
Volunteers will support mapping and enrollment work. The committee reported that volunteer William Christiansen will receive an existing database and create GIS overlays to help the group identify uncovered streets; members proposed coordinating block captains and neighborhood-watch leaders to reach full coverage.
The committee also highlighted a homeowner benefit to recruitment: a member reported noting a "2 percent Firewise discount" in their State Farm insurance materials and urged the committee to publicize the insurance incentive as a motivator for residents to secure Firewise certification.
On a formal motion tied to outreach resources, the committee voted to request $3,000 from the town for "needed community outreach," to be allocated toward community outreach, events and materials. The motion passed with a recorded 4–1 vote. The committee said it will provide the town with a more specific budget breakdown before packet deadlines and follow the town’s budget submission schedule.
Next steps: committee members will prepare copy for the town newsletter (timing discussed for an early summer mailing), finalize outreach materials and maps, recruit block captains for target neighborhoods such as Blue Oaks and Willowbrook, and aim to present budget details to town staff before the town packet deadline. The committee set a tentative next meeting for May 21 at 10 a.m.

