Over 100 residents packed in the Jacksonville city hall to express their concerns and opinions on what should come next for wildfire prevention policy in Oregon.
Tensions were high, with some residents chiding others for not doing enough to prevent wildfires on their property. Many worried about the potential for rising insurance premiums or not being able to find coverage at all.
For now, the plan is to work with private insurance companies and demonstrate that Oregonians are taking steps to mitigate wildfire risk, said Golden, who championed the 2021 legislation. But, he said, that might not be enough to keep companies from leaving the state.
鈥淲e may have to think about public insurance. And actually we have that right now, I mentioned the FAIR program," Golden said. "But it鈥檚 not funded at a level that gives you a policy that鈥檚 as good as you have now.鈥
Another concern was about requiring utility operators to mitigate wildfire risk. Medford resident Lynda Feld-Quartemont said she worried utility providers will pass the costs of wildfire mitigation onto consumers. But, according to Golden, if companies want to raise their rates they'd first need to get approval from the Oregon Public Utility Commission, which may or may not approve an increase.
Golden agreed the rollout of the state wildfire risk map was unsuccessful, and said he鈥檚 committed to ensuring the future of wildfire prevention in Oregon is guided by the public.
鈥淭his program will fail if it doesn鈥檛 have a high level of public support," he said. "That doesn鈥檛 mean everybody loves what we鈥檙e doing, that doesn鈥檛 happen with any legislation. But this is something the government can鈥檛 solve on its own. It鈥檚 too big.鈥
Golden said he believes the updated wildfire risk map will focus on regions of wildfire risk, rather than individually identifying homes. He鈥檚 hoping to see a draft version of that map in March. Finalizing it could take the rest of the year.
He said the future of the legislature鈥檚 wildfire preparedness plan will focus more on collaboration and incentives for homeowners rather than forcing them to make changes through regulation.
Golden said finding a path forward will require everyone to work together, including homeowners, state lawmakers and federal forest managers.