OMB Approval # 0596-0189
Appendix 3 –Survey for New Mexico (state name will be changed when administering survey in other three states)
Expires: To be Updated
Reducing Risk of Wildfires in New Mexico:
Your opinion matters
Diagram Credit:
ARE YOU FIREWISE FLORIDA?
OMB Control Number: 0596-0189
Before starting please be advised that according to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a valid OMB control number. The valid OMB control number for this information collection is 0596-0189. The time required to complete the survey in this information collection is estimated to average 25 minutes per response.
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To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call toll free (866) 632-9992 (voice). TDD users can contact USDA through local relay or the Federal relay at (800) 877-8339 (TDD) or (866) 377-8642 (relay voice). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
We invite you to participate in the survey by completing this survey. Your participation is voluntary. All responses will be
held in strict confidentiality. Thank you for your time.
Wildfires in New Mexico Wildfires
are uncontrolled fires that burn forests, brush, and grasslands.
Wildfires burn about 427,486 acres per year in New Mexico (about
5.6% of New Mexico’s forest land), and about 124 houses are
destroyed by wildfire. In 2011, wildfires burned over 1,200,000
acres and 86 homes were destroyed in New Mexico.
Section A: Landscaping Where You Live
In this section, we ask a few questions about the landscaping around your home and in the neighborhood where you live. Then we ask you to assess the risk of your home being damaged if a wildfire occurs in your neighborhood.
Q1. How would you describe the majority of the ground cover in your yard within 30 feet of your house? (CIRCLE ONE)
Mostly mowed lawn, gravel, or bare ground
Mostly pine needles
Mostly tall grass
Other (please describe) ____________________________
Q2. How would you describe the shrubs growing in your yard? (CIRCLE AS MANY AS APPLY)
No shrubs
1-5 shrubs within 30 feet of my house
More than 5 shrubs within 30 feet of my house
Shrubs growing up to, or above, the eaves of my house
Other (please describe) ____________________________
Q3. How many trees are located within 30 feet of your house? (CIRCLE ONE)
No trees within 30 feet of my house
1-5 trees within 30 feet of my house
6 or more trees within 30 feet of my house
Don’t know
Q4. How would you describe the view of your house from neighboring property? (CIRCLE ONE)
Easily seen from all directions
View partially blocked from some directions
Difficult to view from all directions
Other (please describe) ____________________________
Q5. How would you describe the landscaping in your neighborhood? (CIRCLE AS MANY AS APPLY)
Mostly lawns, small shrubs and trees
Mostly lawns and large shrubs and trees
Easy to walk through forest or brush
Difficult to walk through forest or brush
Other (please describe) ____________________________
Q6. Are there any natural areas (undeveloped land) within ½ mile of your home that contain woodland or brush?
Yes (Go to Q7)
No (Go to Q8)
Q7. How would you describe any natural areas near where you live that contain woodland or brush? (CIRCLE AS MANY AS APPLY)
The natural area is small (less than 5 acres)
The natural area is large (greater than 5 acres)
The natural area is mostly covered with scattered trees/ brush (easy to see through)
The natural area is mostly covered with dense trees/ brush (difficult to see through)
The natural area contains a pond, lake, or wetlands
Other (please describe) ________________________________
You
can reduce the risk of a wildfire damaging your home by removing
highly flammable vegetation within 30 feet of your home.
What You Can Do To Reduce
Wildfire Risk
High Fire Risk
Landscaping:
Wildfire experts in New Mexico have determined that your home is at
a high risk
of being damaged by wildfire if most of the following are present
around your home and in your neighborhood: A
thick bed of pine needles on the ground (this carries fire across
the ground) A
continuous layer of highly flammable shrubs over 3 feet tall such
as hedges (fire climbs into the trees) Vines
and small trees underneath taller trees (fire climbs into to the
trees) Several
(6 or more) trees
within 30 feet of your house, and a few trees (1-5) touching or
extending over your home (trees can carry fire to the roof) Dense
vegetation blocking the view of your home from the street Dense,
difficult to walk through areas of forest within ½ mile of
your home
Medium Fire Risk
Landscaping:
Your home would be at a medium
risk of being
damaged by a wildfire if most of the following characteristics are
present: Unmowed
or tall grass, weeds or small shrubs, and fine bark as mulch A
few (1-5) highly flammable shrubs over 3 feet tall
No
vines or small trees underneath taller trees
1
to 5 trees within 30 feet of your house; none touch the house or
over the roof A
partial view of your home from the street
Easy
to walk through areas of forest within ½ mile of your home
Low Fire Risk
Landscaping:
Your home would be at a low
risk of being
damaged by wildfire if most of the following characteristics are
present: Mowed
lawn, bare ground, pavement or gravel, chunky bark used for mulch
No
highly flammable shrubs over 3 feet tall
No
vines or small trees underneath larger trees Trees
within 30 feet of your house should not touch each other or touch
the house A
clear view of your home from the street Easy
to see through areas of forest or brush within ½ mile of
your home
Q8. Thinking about the descriptions of fire risk above and the characteristics of the landscape surrounding your house and within ½ mile of your house, how would you describe the risk of your house being damaged if a wildfire were to occur in your neighborhood? (CIRCLE ONE NUMBER)
Low risk
Medium risk
High risk
Chances of Your House
Being Damaged by Wildfire The
chances that a wildfire will damage or destroy your house depends on
several factors, including the type of vegetation in your yard and
your neighborhood and how easy or difficult it is for firefighters
to get to a wildfire while it is still small. The average annual
chance of your house being damaged or destroyed by wildfire is
computed by: Average
Annual Chance = Number of houses burned in one year divided by total
number of houses (For example: 0.01= 10/1,000; or 1% annually)
Error! Not a valid link.
To help you think about the average annual chance of everyday hazards happening to you, please examine the “CHANCE LADDER” on the insert. Locate the “step” on the ladder that states “A wildfire damaging or destroying your house …” Think about the location of this step in relation to other steps on the ladder.
Then,
turn the paper over and examine the two “CHANCE
GRIDS”.
Read the information and think about the chances that your
house will be damaged or destroyed by a wildfire in a single year
and during a ten year period.
Section B: Expected Losses from Wildfire
In this section, we ask a few questions about the chances that your house would be damaged from a wildfire and the monetary losses to you. This is the approach fire professionals and insurance agents use to evaluate fire risk. This information will help you in answering the remaining questions.
Q9. Looking at the CHANCE LADDER, is the chance that your house will be
damaged or destroyed by wildfire during a typical year greater than or less
than the chance of dying from a fall during a typical year?
1. Greater than
2. Less than
3. Unsure
Q10. Looking at the UPPER CHANCE GRID, if you lived in this neighborhood,
what is the average annual chance that your house would be damaged or
destroyed by wildfire?
1. Average annual chance = 5 in 1000
2. Average annual chance = 50 in 1000
3. Unsure
Q11. Looking at the LOWER CHANCE GRID, if you lived in this neighborhood, the average chance that your house would be damaged or destroyed by a wildfire over a ten-year period is approximately 50/1000 (which is 5%). For the neighborhood where you currently live, do you think this 5% chance is:
Too low
Too high
About right
Don’t know
Section C: What Fire
Managers Can Do To Reduce Fire Risk In
addition to what you can do to reduce flammable vegetation around
your home, county and city fire managers attempt to reduce the
chance that a wildfire will damage homes by removing some flammable
vegetation in forests and undeveloped areas near neighborhoods. In
this section, we describe 3 public wildfire prevention programs that
are used in New Mexico. Then, we ask you about what you think of
the public and private wildfire management techniques.
Public Wildfire Prevention
Methods These
methods reduce the amount of shrubs and small trees in a forest that
could carry fire along the ground or that could carry a fire from
the ground up into the tops of trees. There are three major
vegetation
management
techniques that fire managers use to reduce wildfire probabilities: 1.
Prescribed burning
– by setting controlled fires, fire managers reduce the amount
of forest vegetation that can sustain a fire. 2.
Mechanical
treatment –
by “mowing” low and medium height shrubs and small trees
fire managers reduce the amount of vegetation that can sustain a
fire. 3.
Herbicide treatment
– by using Government approved herbicides which are not
dangerous to wildlife or to drinking water supplies, fire managers
reduce the amount of forest vegetation that sustain a fire. A
Ten-year
Vegetation
Management Program
consists of one or any combination of the three vegetation
management techniques defined above used to remove hazardous fuels
from the forest floor to reduce the probability of a fire
occurrence.
Sufficient
funding does not currently exist to conduct these three activities
everywhere they are needed. Thus, the costs for the above
activities could be paid for by a one time lump sum payment into a
County trust fund to be used only for the Ten-year Vegetation
Management Program. A citizen advisory board would review the
expenditures from the fund annually.
NOT SOMEWHAT VERY
----------SUCESSFUL---------
Q12. How successful do you think a
Prescribed burning program would be? 1 2 3 4 5
Q13. How successful do you think a
Mechanical treatment program would be? 1 2 3 4 5
Q14. How successful do you think a
Herbicide treatment program would be? 1 2 3 4 5
Q15. How successful do you think the Ten-year
vegetation management program would be? 1 2 3 4 5
Q16. Sufficient funding does not currently exist to conduct these three activities everywhere they are needed. A citizen advisory board would review the expenditures from the fund annually. Would you be willing to pay higher annual property taxes for any of the following Public Wildfire Prevention Activities in undeveloped areas near your neighborhood? (CHECK ONE BOX FOR EACH ACTIVITY)
YES NO
• Prescribed burning □ □
• Mechanical treatment □ □
• Herbicide treatment □ □
WOULD HAVE NO
DO DONE
• Trim lower branches on trees □ □ □
• Remove vines from trees □ □ □
• Remove trees and flammable plants □ □ □
• Remove branches hanging over house □ □ □
Section D: What Wildfire Prevention Methods Do You Prefer?
• In this section, we are interested in learning what you personally are willing to do (if anything) to reduce the risk of a wildfire damaging your home. For each question in this section, you are presented with 3 alternatives, two of which reduce wildfire risks (expressed as 10 year average chances). Then, you are asked which, if either, of the alternatives you would choose.
• The chance of your house being damaged by a wildfire is varied across the alternatives, as is the amount of monetary damage, because wildfire conditions and property values vary between locations in New Mexico. For your convenience, we have computed the Expected Loss associated with each alternative by multiplying the “Chance of your house being damaged in next 10 years” times the amount of “Damage to property”.
• The one time cost to you of the ten-year program is also varied so that we may better understand the importance of the cost in your decision. Please answer each question in this section without referring to previous questions.
Q18. |
Alternative #1a |
Alternative #2a |
Alternative #3 |
Public Fire Prevention |
Private Fire Prevention |
Do nothing additional |
|
Chance of your house being damaged in next 10 years |
10 in 1,000 (1%) |
40 in 1,000 (4%) |
50 in 1,000 (5%) |
Damage to property
|
$75,000 |
$50,000 |
$100,000 |
Expected 10 year loss = Chance x damage
|
$750 during 10 years |
$2,000 during 10 years |
$5,000 during 10 years |
One time cost to you for the ten-year program
|
$200 |
$1,000 |
$0 |
I would choose: Please check one box
|
□ |
□ |
□ |
Q19. |
Alternative #1b |
Alternative #2b |
Alternative #3 |
Public Fire Prevention |
Private Fire Prevention |
Do nothing additional |
|
Chance of your house being damaged in next 10 years |
10 in 1,000 (1%) |
25 in 1,000 (2.5%) |
50 in 1,000 (5%) |
Damage to property
|
$10,000 |
$50,000 |
$100,000 |
Expected 10 year loss = Chance x damage
|
$100 during 10 years |
$1,250 during 10 years |
$5,000 during 10 years |
One time cost to you for the ten-year program
|
$100 |
$500 |
$0 |
I would choose: Please check one box
|
□ |
□ |
□ |
Q20. |
Alternative #1c |
Alternative #2c |
Alternative #3 |
Public Fire Prevention |
Private Fire Prevention |
Do nothing additional |
|
Chance of your house being damaged in next 10 years |
40 in 1,000 (4%) |
10 in 1,000 (1%) |
50 in 1,000 (5%) |
Damage to property
|
$40,000 |
$80,000 |
$100,000 |
Expected 10 year loss = Chance x damage
|
$1,600 during 10 years |
$800 during 10 years |
$5,000 during 10 years |
One time cost to you for the ten-year program
|
$300 |
$100 |
$0 |
I would choose: Please check one box
|
□ |
□ |
□ |
Q21. Please describe why you chose the alternative you did in Questions 18- 20.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
Section E
In this section, we would like to learn a little bit about you for statistical purposes. We would like to remind you that all of your answers to this survey are strictly confidential. However, we need this information to be able to compare your responses with other people in New Mexico.
Q22. Have you ever made any changes to your house or to the landscaping around your house to reduce the risk of wildfire? (CIRCLE ONE)
1. YES 2. NO
Q23. Has your health, or the health of anyone else in your family, ever suffered from breathing smoke from a wildfire? (CIRCLE ONE)
1. YES 2. NO
Q24. Have you, or anyone else in your family, ever been bothered by smoke from a prescribed fire? (CIRCLE ONE)
1. YES 2. NO
Q25. Have you ever had to change your travel plans because of a wildfire? (CIRCLE ONE)
1. YES 2. NO
Q26. How concerned are you about wildfires in New Mexico (CIRCLE ONE)
I am very concerned
I am somewhat concerned
I am not concerned at all
Q27. Do you currently have homeowners insurance? (CIRCLE ONE)
1. YES 2. NO
Q28. What is your gender? (CIRCLE ONE)
Female 2. Male
Q29. What are your ethnicity / race?
Ethnicity (CIRCLE ONE)
1. Hispanic or Latino 2. Not Hispanic or Latino
Race (CIRCLE ONE OR MORE)
American Indian or Alaska Native
Asian
Black or African American
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
White
Q30. How old are you? (FILL IN THE BLANK) ________
Q31. What is the highest level of education you have completed? (CIRCLE ONE NUMBER)
Less than high school
High school graduate or GED
Some college or technical school/ associate’s degree
College graduate (Bachelor’s degree or technical degree)
Postgraduate (Master’s degree, Doctorate, Law degree, other professional degree)
Q32. What was your total household income before taxes for last year? (CIRCLE ONE)
Less than $9,999 6. $75,000 – 89,999
$10,000-$14,999 7. $90,000 - $104,999
$15,000-$29,999 8. $105,000 - $119,999
$30,000 - $44,999 9. $120,000 or more
5. $60,000 - $74,999
Q33. Suppose that you are the only income earner in the family, and you have a good job guaranteed to give you and your current family income every year for life. You are given the opportunity to take a new and equally interesting job. The new job may be better (a 50-50 chance that it will double your family income; for example, from $50 thousand to $100 thousand annually.) or it may be worse (a 50-50 chance that it will cut your family income by one-half; for example, from $50 thousand to $25 thousand annually.). Would you take the new job?
1. YES 2. NO
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Thomas P. Holmes |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2022-02-15 |