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Newsom Signs $170M Wildfire Prevention Bill for NorCal, SoCal Amid Drought
National Desk
May 1, 2026
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Governor Gavin Newsom on April 2025 signed a landmark bill allocating more than $170 million for wildfire prevention, focusing on thinning overgrown forests and vegetation in vulnerable regions. The funding directs at least $85 million to Southern California conservancies, including the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and San Gabriel and Lower Los Angeles Rivers and Mountains Conservancy, while $54 million targets the Sierra Nevada Conservancy. Additional grants of about $31 million each go to the State Coastal Conservancy and others, with $23 million apiece for the California Tahoe Conservancy and San Diego River Conservancy.[1][7]
The legislation arrives amid persistent drought conditions exacerbating wildfire threats across Northern and Central California counties, building on Newsom's March 2025 state of emergency declaration. That proclamation suspended key environmental regulations like the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and California Coastal Act to fast-track projects such as tree removal, fuel breaks, and prescribed burns. "With this latest round of funding, we’re continuing to increase the speed and size of forest and vegetation management essential to protecting communities," Newsom stated.[1][3][4]
This effort follows the catastrophic January 2025 Los Angeles-area infernos that killed 29 people and razed thousands of structures, prompting Newsom's emergency measures and a federal aid request for nearly $40 billion in recovery funds. The state is channeling $2.5 billion into the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Action Plan, which ramps up fuel reduction and prescribed fire statewide, on top of $200 million annual fire prevention investments. Non-state entities can now conduct expedited fuels work, boosting the California Vegetation Treatment Program's reach.[3][4]
Earlier precedents include Newsom's 2021 $536 million wildfire package, signed at a Lake Oroville fuels project in Butte County to safeguard against repeats of the North Complex Fire, funding forest health, community hardening, and defensible space statewide. As peak fire season looms in 2026, these steps underscore California's multi-billion-dollar commitment to resilience amid climate-amplified risks.[2]
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