Spy Rock Community Gains Safer Roads and Healthier Forests with Wildfire Prevention Project
At a recent community meeting, neighbors gathered to learn about wildfire home hardening tips and celebrate the grant announcement—a significant investment directly benefiting every household dependent on Spyrock Road for access.
Why Spy Rock Matters
Hundreds of families reach their homes off these roads, which means if the road is blocked by wildfire, they have no way to escape. Spyrock Road stretches east from Highway 101, serving as a lifeline to a network of rural homes spread across five watersheds: Blue Rock Creek, Big Bend Creek/Eel River, Tin Cabin Creek/Eel River, Rattlesnake Creek, and Woodman Creek.
Beyond resident safety, these watersheds are vulnerable to wildfire-driven erosion. This sends sediment into streams, harming water quality and affecting coho salmon populations. Reducing roadside fuel loads isn’t just about saving homes—it also protects rivers, fish habitat, and the water residents depend on.
Today’s overgrown forests are crowded with too many trees competing for too little water, reducing both resilience and carbon storage. By protecting the carbon locked in big trees and soils, the project strengthens forest health, improves water quality, and builds a safer environment for the Spy Rock community.
Community-Led, Community-Powered Ethos
Ethos partnered with the Mendocino County Fire Safe Council, local Fire Safe Councils (Spy Rock Ready!, Wildwood, and Blue Rock FSCs), Assistant Fire Chief Greg Smith, and County Supervisor John Hashak. Landowners along the road signed access agreements, allowing crews expanded access to work up to 50 feet from the road’s edge.
Visible Change: Safer, More Beautiful Roadsides
Treatments reduce surface fuels, preventing fire from racing into the canopy and cutting the risk of high-intensity roadside wildfire and road closures.
Local Jobs, Stronger Rural Economy
Crews carefully hand-thin trees and brush, lay material neatly for next-day chipping, and mulch the forest floor with the chips. Larger branches and small logs are left for landowners’ use, ensuring resources stay in the community. The Mendocino County Fire Safe Council provided expertise, including essential biological and forestry review, keeping the work both effective and environmentally sound.
Part of a Bigger Vision: California Climate Investments
The Cap-and-Trade program also creates a financial incentive for industries to invest in clean technologies and develop innovative ways to reduce pollution. California Climate Investments projects include affordable housing, renewable energy, public transportation, zero-emission vehicles, environmental restoration, more sustainable agriculture, recycling, and much more. At least 35 percent of these investments are located within and benefiting residents of disadvantaged communities, low-income communities, and low-income households across California.
For more information, visit the California Climates Investments Website
