Legislation Details

File #: 26-0383    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Letter Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 4/16/2026 In control: BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
On agenda: 4/21/2026 Final action:
Title: 10:45 A.M.- Consideration of Legislative Position Letters on: (A) AB 2494 (Rogers) - State Forests: Forest Management; and (B) AB 2216 (Aguiar-Curry)
Sponsors: Brad Rasmussen, Jessica Pyska
Attachments: 1. Lake County BOS - OPPOSE UNLESS AMENDED - AB 2494.pdf, 2. Lake County BOS - SUPPORT if Amended (Inclusion of Lake County).pdf, 3. Public Comment_InterTribal Sinkyone Wilderness Council
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Memorandum


Date: April 21, 2026

To: The Honorable Lake County Board of Supervisors

From: Brad Rasmussen, Chair, District 4 Supervisor
Jessica Pyska, Vice Chair, District 5 Supervisor

Subject: Consideration of Legislative Position Letters on: (A) AB 2494 (Rogers) - State Forests: Forest Management; and (B) AB 2216 (Aguiar-Curry)

Executive Summary:
With this item, we request our Board approve Legislative Position Letters on AB 2494 and AB 2216:

(A) AB 2494 would modify the framework governing California's Demonstration State Forests (DSFs), which could unintentionally undermine critical, ongoing research and active forest management needed to improve wildfire resilience. As written, this Legislation could reduce the State's ability to conduct essential management activities, including thinning and vegetation treatment, which are necessary to maintain forest health and reduce wildfire risk.

Further, it is particularly critical that research activities at Boggs Mountain, particularly, continue, as Boggs was the first SDF to experience significant disturbance due to wildfire, and reforestation efforts have been both multi-faceted and highly successful, providing lessons learned that have ramifications well beyond Lake County. 2015's Valley Fire burned 99 percent of Boggs State Demonstration Forest, killing approximately 80 percent of mature trees and 95 percent of understory vegetation, and devastating surrounding communities by destroying nearly 2,000 structures. In the years since, recovery has required extensive intervention, including salvage logging, the planting of more than 700,000 seedlings, and the implementation of major research initiatives examining watershed impacts, carbon dynamics, and forest regeneration. These projects are essential to understanding how post-fire management strategies influence recovery and long-term forest health.

Our Board and Lake County have long supported a balanced, science-driven approach to forest stewards...

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