While other local "news sources" ignore the importance of this hot bed issue ( pun intended ), The Real Malibu 411 was front and center with the distribution of the press release, subsequently uploaded to all of our social media platforms. Additionally, the media outreach of Cece Stein of Rock & Revolution P.R., also a Corral Canyon resident and in association with neighbor and concerned Malibu resident Lori Jacobus who took the time to put this petition together we hope will make the difference.
Help us permanently ban overnight camping in our high risk areas and avoid the devastation Malibuites all to familiar with! We deserve a good night's sleep like the rest of the world and that can't happen if overnight camping is allowed!
PR Log - Global Press Release Distribution
Help us permanently ban overnight camping in our high risk areas and avoid the devastation Malibuites all to familiar with! We deserve a good night's sleep like the rest of the world and that can't happen if overnight camping is allowed!
PR Log - Global Press Release Distribution
Petition to Ban Overnight Camping in High Risk Fire Areas of Malibu Reaches 1,000 Signatures
Source: Rock & Revolution P.R. Dated: Feb. 26, 2013
Malibu Residents Petitioning The City of Malibu and The Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy
Malibu, CA - February 26, 2013 - With strong momentum behind them, Malibu residents are rallying the people of Los Angeles County to join in signing a petition to protect visitors to Malibu canyons and state parks from the danger of campfires in unsupervised terrains, as similar discussions ensue between the Malibu City Council and The Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy.
Malibu local Lori Jacobus started a petition to put an end to the controversial proposal allowing camping above the highly populated canyons.
"I was inspired to start this petition out of concern for those who would be coming to these proposed campsites from out of town,” says Jacobus. “Malibu residents have become reluctant experts on fire and fire evacuation; we know how to get out safely, but those coming into these canyons to camp do not have first hand experience of a fast moving wildfire, nor do they understand that these canyons have their own weather patterns and the dangerous landscape conditions.”
“Allowing overnight camping in these hills could be potentially devastating and even life-threatening for both residents and campers alike,” adds Jacobus. “The terrain and conditions do not lend themselves to the better structured, regulated and monitored camping experiences available in our state and national parks – and in the hills of Malibu, “fire season” has become a year around event as is evidenced by the fire danger signs the have read “high” many times this winter.”
According to FEMA’s wesbite, the leading heat source of intentionally set [man-made] outdoor fires, by more than five times the second leading source, is heat from open flames, such as campfires, or smoking materials (70 percent). An illegal campfire was the cause of the devastating 2007 Corral Canyon blaze, which burned 53 homes to the ground. More than five years on, some residents have yet to rebuild. Fires of any kind, including legal campfires which were the result of 9 wildfires in 2012 alone, already carry an increasing level of risk in understaffed campgrounds and State Parks. As the losses of the 2007 blazes demonstrate, even with well-regulated brush clearance, just one campfire in a hard-to-reach location can quickly take a tragic and unexpected turn.
The petition has already exceeded 1,000 signatures and residents are currently mobilizing teams to begin collecting signatures at shopping centers and other public areas with high foot traffic in Malibu, Agoura, Calabasas, Palisades, Topanga and additional surrounding areas.
“The residents of Malibu are most interested in doing whatever it takes to minimize the risk of more fires,” says Jacobus. “Fires are going to happen naturally, we get that and we accept it – but there’s no reason to knowingly and further risk public safety.”
More information regarding the petition, generated through change.org, can be found at Change.org
Source: Rock & Revolution P.R. Dated: Feb. 26, 2013
Malibu Residents Petitioning The City of Malibu and The Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy
Malibu, CA - February 26, 2013 - With strong momentum behind them, Malibu residents are rallying the people of Los Angeles County to join in signing a petition to protect visitors to Malibu canyons and state parks from the danger of campfires in unsupervised terrains, as similar discussions ensue between the Malibu City Council and The Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy.
Malibu local Lori Jacobus started a petition to put an end to the controversial proposal allowing camping above the highly populated canyons.
"I was inspired to start this petition out of concern for those who would be coming to these proposed campsites from out of town,” says Jacobus. “Malibu residents have become reluctant experts on fire and fire evacuation; we know how to get out safely, but those coming into these canyons to camp do not have first hand experience of a fast moving wildfire, nor do they understand that these canyons have their own weather patterns and the dangerous landscape conditions.”
“Allowing overnight camping in these hills could be potentially devastating and even life-threatening for both residents and campers alike,” adds Jacobus. “The terrain and conditions do not lend themselves to the better structured, regulated and monitored camping experiences available in our state and national parks – and in the hills of Malibu, “fire season” has become a year around event as is evidenced by the fire danger signs the have read “high” many times this winter.”
According to FEMA’s wesbite, the leading heat source of intentionally set [man-made] outdoor fires, by more than five times the second leading source, is heat from open flames, such as campfires, or smoking materials (70 percent). An illegal campfire was the cause of the devastating 2007 Corral Canyon blaze, which burned 53 homes to the ground. More than five years on, some residents have yet to rebuild. Fires of any kind, including legal campfires which were the result of 9 wildfires in 2012 alone, already carry an increasing level of risk in understaffed campgrounds and State Parks. As the losses of the 2007 blazes demonstrate, even with well-regulated brush clearance, just one campfire in a hard-to-reach location can quickly take a tragic and unexpected turn.
The petition has already exceeded 1,000 signatures and residents are currently mobilizing teams to begin collecting signatures at shopping centers and other public areas with high foot traffic in Malibu, Agoura, Calabasas, Palisades, Topanga and additional surrounding areas.
“The residents of Malibu are most interested in doing whatever it takes to minimize the risk of more fires,” says Jacobus. “Fires are going to happen naturally, we get that and we accept it – but there’s no reason to knowingly and further risk public safety.”
More information regarding the petition, generated through change.org, can be found at Change.org
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