Year-round fire season means East County residents should always be prepared

by Karen Pearlman | May 1, 2026 3:38 am

Story and photos by Paul Levikow

April 16, 2026 (Mt. Helix) — The reality of year-round fire season in San Diego’s East County was addressed during a recent wildfire preparedness assessment tour at a Mt. Helix home, where residents gathered to learn practical steps to protect their properties before the next emergency strikes.

Hosted by the Rancho Helix de Oro Fire Safe Council at the home of co-chair Lidia Chang, the event brought together more than a dozen neighbors for a detailed walk-through led by a San Miguel Fire and Rescue Department fire inspector. The council is part of the Fire Safe Council of San Diego County and plans to hold additional assessment tours later this year.

Participants moved around the property, examining everything from roofing and vents to landscaping and access routes for fire engines. The message throughout was clear. Preparation done months or years in advance often determines whether a home survives when wildfire moves through a community.

Fire Inspector Colton Israels said the lessons shaping today’s wildfire response were learned through devastating experience.

Firefighters in San Diego County learned their lesson from the 2003 and 2007 firestorms and other fires since, he said, referencing disasters that reshaped emergency planning across the region.

“We really need you. When you hear us banging the war drums on defensible space, we’re not sitting there to do that to pick on anyone or to just make noise,” Israels said. “It’s because we had to learn those lessons, sometimes painfully, and we really need your help to help us help you.”

Israels pointed to the 2003 Cedar Fire as a turning point.

“We were the first kids to get our teeth kicked in. What I mean by that is the Cedar Fire in 2003 burning more than 200,000 acres in East County,” he said.

In the years that followed, San Diego County invested heavily in coordination and communication. The Regional Communications System was activated so first responders and public agencies could communicate seamlessly across jurisdictions. At the time, it was considered the most expensive public safety communications infrastructure project in the world and it remains in use today.

“When the 2007 Witch Fire flared up, they could all communicate with each other but everyone was asking for more help,” Israels said. “That’s when they developed a new resource ordering system (Interagency Resource Ordering Capability, or IROC). It is in use up and down California and in most Western states.”

IROC is a web-based system used by state and federal fire departments to order, track, and mobilize firefighting resources, crews, aircraft, and engines during wildfires. It enables real-time, interagency cooperation, managing more than 10,000 personnel at peak season.

“That allows us to pick up the ‘bat phone’ and say ‘I need help.’ It triggers what’s called the master mutual aid agreement, which every fire department in the state of California has signed,” Israels said. “They will assist in any way possible, to the best of their abilities, any other fire department.”

Even with improved coordination, Israels emphasized that firefighters cannot save every structure without help from property owners.

“If dry brush is growing all the way up to a house, there is nothing firefighters can do to triage the structure and keep flames farther away,” he said. “If you don’t give us that defensible space ahead of time, there is very little we can do, especially in these fast, wind driven fires, it’s a matter of seconds.”

During the tour, Israels highlighted common vulnerabilities and suggested improvements. Trees should be kept at a safe distance from structures, and branches must not overhang roofs.

“You want to keep all limbs or branches that overhang the roof clear. You don’t want them overhanging the roof,” Israels said. “That helps you in both wildfires and wind events so you don’t have anything falling on the house.”

Home construction details can also make a critical difference. Solid, non-vented eaves prevent embers from entering attic spaces.

“Once the fire gets into the attic, the house is a write off,” Israels said.

Dual pane windows, especially those rated for Wildland Urban Interface standards, reduce radiant heat and add a second layer of protection. Ember intrusion through vents remains another major risk, but can be reduced by installing fine mesh coverings designed to resist ignition and block embers.

Decking materials were also discussed, including the use of ignition resistant composite products that are less likely to catch fire during ember storms.

“The key is ignition resistance,” Israels said. “We’re trying to protect homes from a quick, 15-minute assault from these wildfires. There are very few instances in fires where a home has been impacted directly by the flame front for more than that time or the ember assault.”

Landscaping choices around the home play a central role. Residents were advised to remove combustible materials such as mulch and bark within the immediate perimeter of the structure and replace them with non-combustible options like pea gravel, concrete or flagstone extending at least 12 inches from the base of the home.

Fire officials also stressed the importance of access and visibility. House numbers should be clearly visible at night with bright lighting. Gates must have a key access override to allow firefighters entry, or they may be forced to break through during an emergency. Adequate vertical clearance of 13 feet 6 inches is required to allow fire apparatus to reach structures safely.

Beyond the physical structure, residents were encouraged to take additional steps recommended by fire agencies nationwide. These include preparing emergency go bags, maintaining evacuation plans with multiple routes, signing up for local alert systems, and keeping roofs and gutters free of leaves and debris that can ignite from embers.

Officials also noted that Zone 0 requirements, which apply to homes built after 2020, are now in effect and will eventually extend to older homes, requiring stricter standards in the immediate area surrounding structures.

San Miguel Fire and Rescue offers free home assessments, and local landscapers familiar with defensible space guidelines can help homeowners make necessary improvements.

For those who attended the Mt. Helix tour, the hands-on demonstration brought urgency to a familiar warning. In East County, fire season is no longer a few months out of the year. It is a constant condition shaped by climate, terrain and wind.

Preparation, Israels said, is not optional.

It is the difference between a home that stands and one that is lost.

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/year-round-fire-season-means-east-county-residents-should-always-be-prepared/


Water Conservation Garden restores educational programs, expands displays and plans festive events

by Miriam Raftery | May 1, 2026 2:48 am

April 30, 2026 (Rancho San Diego) — The Water Conservation Garden at Cuyamaca College is thriving once again, after facing an uncertain future due to financial troubles. In an interview with East County Magazine for KNSJ Radio, Lauren Magnuson, director of garden operations, shares information on the return of educational programs, new displays including fire-wise landscaping, and the return of signature festivals and events–including the Spring Garden Festival and Butterfly Release this Saturday, May 2.

Click the audio link to hear our full interview.

For more information on the May 2 Spring Garden Festival and Butterfly Release, visit  Spring Garden and Butterfly Festival plus Coyote Music Festival this Saturday, May 2, at Cuyamaca College – East County Magazine[2].

Endnotes:
  1. https://eastcountymagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/LaurenMagnusonInterviewRaw.m4a: https://eastcountymagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/LaurenMagnusonInterviewRaw.m4a
  2.  Spring Garden and Butterfly Festival plus Coyote Music Festival this Saturday, May 2, at Cuyamaca College – East County Magazine: https://eastcountymagazine.org/spring-garden-and-butterfly-festival-plus-coyote-music-festival-this-saturday-may-2-at-cuyamaca-college/

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/water-conservation-garden-restores-educational-programs-expands-displays-and-plans-festive-events/


Hear our interview with County Health Officer Dr. Thihalolipavan on emerging health threats in our region and impacts of federal health policy changes

by Miriam Raftery | April 30, 2026 10:42 pm

 

By Alexander J Schorr

Video Meeting Screenshot of Dr. Sayone Thihalolipavan

April 30, 2026 — In an interview[1] with San Diego County Health Director Dr. Sayone Thihalolipavan[2]  originally aired on KNSJ Radio, he discussed the impacts of cuts by the federal government in research and testing of preventable diseases, vaccines, and emerging diseases in our region, including some exacerbated by climate change.   Hear our full interview by clicking the audio link below, or scroll down to read highlights. (more…)[3]

Endnotes:
  1. an interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S7ydU7oy93E&t=1s
  2. Dr. Sayone Thihalolipavan: https://www.sandiegocounty.gov/content/sdc/hhsa/programs/phs/public-health-officer-.html
  3. (more…): https://eastcountymagazine.org/hear-our-interview-with-county-health-officer-dr-thihalolipavan-on-emerging-health-threats-in-our-region-and-impacts-of-federal-health-policy-changes/#more-124336

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/hear-our-interview-with-county-health-officer-dr-thihalolipavan-on-emerging-health-threats-in-our-region-and-impacts-of-federal-health-policy-changes/


Large crowd at El Cajon Traffic Town Hall focuses on enforcement challenges

by Eliza Bethalper | April 30, 2026 8:53 pm

Story and photos by Paul Levikow

Photo:   About 80 residents participated in a El Cajon Town Hall to discuss speeding and traffic issues.

April 30, 2026 (El Cajon) — One of the largest town hall meetings hosted by the City of El Cajon drew about 80 residents on April 21, as city leaders, staff, and law enforcement gathered to address ongoing concerns about speeding and traffic safety.

Held at the Ronald Reagan Community Center, the meeting included participation from the mayor, city council, city officials, police representatives, and media, with a focus on identifying enforcement, education, and engineering strategies to reduce speeding across the city. (more…)[1]

Endnotes:
  1. (more…): https://eastcountymagazine.org/large-crowd-at-el-cajon-traffic-town-hall-focuses-on-enforcement-challenges/#more-124351

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/large-crowd-at-el-cajon-traffic-town-hall-focuses-on-enforcement-challenges/


San Diego Humane Society slashing fees for ‘Empty the Shelters’ drive

by Karen Pearlman | April 30, 2026 8:25 pm

East County News Service

April 30, 2026 (San Diego) — On a day meant to celebrate the bond between humans and animals, the San Diego Humane Society is issuing an urgent plea to the community to adopt.

April 30 marks National Adopt a Shelter Pet Day, and the timing couldn’t be more critical: local shelters are bursting at the seams, operating at staggering capacity levels across the county.

Working toward stopping the crisis, the SDHS announced it is joining the Bissell Pet Foundation’s national “Empty the Shelters” initiative. From May 1 through May 17 adoption fees for adult dogs and cats (ages seven months and older) will be reduced to $50.

(more…)[1]

Endnotes:
  1. (more…): https://eastcountymagazine.org/san-diego-humane-society-slashing-fees-for-empty-the-shelters-drive/#more-124332

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/san-diego-humane-society-slashing-fees-for-empty-the-shelters-drive/


Reader’s Editorial:  Bill Wells just sued California to make it easier to hurt his own neighbors

by Miriam Raftery | April 30, 2026 4:41 pm

By David A. Myers Retired Commander, San Diego Sheriff’s Office

April 30, 2026 (El Cajon) — This week, El Cajon Mayor Bill Wells stood outside City Hall with a Trump operative at his shoulder and announced that his city is suing the State of California to gut SB 54, the California Values Act. He called it “one of the most important days of my life.”

Read that again. The most important day in the life of the mayor of one of America’s largest refugee resettlement cities is not a budget that lifts a working family out of poverty. Not a Chaldean kid sworn in as a citizen. Not a public-safety win his officers can be proud of. It is a press conference attacking the law that protects his own neighbors.

That single sentence is the indictment.

El Cajon is home to tens of thousands of Iraqi Chaldeans — Aramaic-speaking Christians who fled Saddam Hussein and ISIS — alongside Syrian, Afghan, Somali, and Latino families. It has the highest poverty rate in East County. It is precisely the kind of community a serious mayor would spend every waking hour trying to lift.

Wells has spent his time, instead, methodically dismantling the trust those residents have in their own local government, one cynical stunt at a time.

The lawsuit, drafted by the Trump-aligned America First Policy Institute, argues that California’s drivers’ license access and workplace protections amount to felony “human smuggling.” It is a press release dressed up as a pleading. The Ninth Circuit upheld SB 54 in 2019 against the first Trump administration. The Supreme Court refused to take it. Attorney General Rob Bonta’s response: El Cajon “should prepare for another loss.” Taxpayers will foot the bill.

This is not a one-time misstep.

Wells has repeatedly told the public that California is “threatening” El Cajon officers with criminal charges for following SB 54. The claim is false. El Cajon’s own police chief, Jeremiah Larson, said so on the record: “We do not believe California is threatening felony charges for violations of SB 54.” A mayor who lies to his own officers — and forces his chief to publicly correct him — is not running a city. He is running a grift.

He has handed El Cajon’s license plate reader data to police in more than 20 states. KPBS found that out-of-state agencies searched it 574 times between January and July 2025, using terms including “immigration” and “ICE assist.” Wells called the privacy concerns a “liberal fantasy.” The records — his city’s own records — say otherwise.

And the claim that this is about removing dangerous criminals collapses on the data. ICE arrested 17 people in El Cajon in the first seven months of 2025. Only four had criminal convictions. At Otay Mesa Detention Center, more than 80 percent of detainees have no criminal record at all.

SB 54 exists because every credible police chief knows that when undocumented residents fear a 911 call ends in deportation, the calls stop. Witnesses disappear. Cases go unsolved.

The City Council should rescind the January 2025 cooperation resolution. The Police Department should terminate out-of-state ALPR access immediately and publish three years of query logs. And voters should remember that a mayor who has lost the trust of his refugees, his immigrant workers, and his own police chief has no business deciding who in this city gets to feel safe at home.

El Cajon’s immigrants did not come here to be a punchline in someone else’s culture war. The least their mayor can do is stop helping the people trying to hurt them.

The opinions in this editorial reflect the views of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of East County Magazine. To submit an editorial for consideration, contact editor@eastcountymagazine.org[1]

 

Endnotes:
  1. editor@eastcountymagazine.org: mailto:editor@eastcountymagazine.org

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/readers-editorial-bill-wells-just-sued-california-to-make-it-easier-to-hurt-his-own-neighbors/


 Spring Garden and Butterfly Festival plus Coyote Music Festival this Saturday, May 2, at Cuyamaca College

by Miriam Raftery | April 30, 2026 3:21 pm

 

East County News Service

April 30, 2026 (Rancho San Diego) – Cuyamaca College is hosting the Spring Garden and Butterfly Festival as well as the Coyote Music Festival. Both major community events are happening this Saturday, May 2 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and are free to the public.

This highly anticipated community fetivity brings together The Water Conservation Garden, Cuyamaca College, and the Heritage of the Americas Museum for a day filled with nature, music, learning, and family fun.

Festival highlights include: (more…)[1]

Endnotes:
  1. (more…): https://eastcountymagazine.org/spring-garden-and-butterfly-festival-plus-coyote-music-festival-this-saturday-may-2-at-cuyamaca-college/#more-124320

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/spring-garden-and-butterfly-festival-plus-coyote-music-festival-this-saturday-may-2-at-cuyamaca-college/


San Diego mail carriers to lead food drive on May 9

by Karen Pearlman | April 30, 2026 5:46 am

East County News Service

April 29, 2026 (San Diego County) — The U.S. Postal Service will carry more than just mail Saturday, May 9 during the 34th annual Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive.

Recognized as the largest single-day food collection effort in the United States, the event mobilizes the National Association of Letter Carriers and the Jacobs & Cushman San Diego Food Bank in replenishing local food pantry shelves before summer.

(more…)[1]

Endnotes:
  1. (more…): https://eastcountymagazine.org/san-diego-mail-carriers-to-lead-food-drive-on-may-9/#more-124317

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/san-diego-mail-carriers-to-lead-food-drive-on-may-9/


San Diego County to host first focus group on rural winery expansion

by Karen Pearlman | April 30, 2026 5:02 am

East County News Service

April 29, 2026 (San Diego County) — Wine not change for the better? That’s a question that will likely be tackled soon as San Diego County officials seek to modernize the region’s winery ordinance.

To start the grapes rolling, the county needs residents to share their thoughts on the backcountry economy’s future — balancing a burgeoning wine industry with the quiet of rural life.

The County of San Diego Planning & Development Services has announced the first in a series of focus group meetings about the Tiered Winery Rural Residential Expansion Project. The first meeting, set for noon Wednesday, May 13, marks a critical step in a multi-year effort of updating the ordinance.

(more…)[1]

Endnotes:
  1. (more…): https://eastcountymagazine.org/san-diego-county-to-host-first-focus-group-on-rural-winery-expansion/#more-124314

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/san-diego-county-to-host-first-focus-group-on-rural-winery-expansion/


Treat your sweetheart to Valentine’s chocolate and wine at San Pasqual Winery in La Mesa

by Karen Pearlman | April 30, 2026 4:20 am

East County News Service

January 26, 2026 (La Mesa) – San Pasqual Winery in La Mesa invites you to enjoy an evening of wines paired with artisan gourmet chocolates by Swete Petite Confections on February 12 and 14 from 5 to 6:30 p.m.

(more…)[1]

Endnotes:
  1. (more…): https://eastcountymagazine.org/treat-your-sweetheart-to-valentines-chocolate-and-wine-at-san-pasqual-winery-in-la-mesa/#more-124310

Source URL: https://eastcountymagazine.org/treat-your-sweetheart-to-valentines-chocolate-and-wine-at-san-pasqual-winery-in-la-mesa/