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Option 1: Bold

We now have the science and the tools we need to succeed. Science tells us that 10% of the fire-prone areas in the West are responsible for 80% of the risk to communities. By targeting fire-adapted forests in these specific areas and placing our treatments strategically, we can reduce wildfire impacts not only to homes and communities but also effects on air quality, watersheds, wildlife habitat and other values at risk.   

Over the next decade, we intend to collaborate with partners to treat an additional 20 million acres on National Forest System lands and an additional 30 million acres on federal, state, tribal and private lands.

The days of treating a few million acres a year are behind us. We must reduce fuels at the level of the landscape to meet the threat of catastrophic wildfire at scale. Fire disregards ownership boundaries, and we’ll work across all jurisdictions to carry out this strategy.

Option 2: Italics

We now have the science and the tools we need to succeed. Science tells us that 10% of the fire-prone areas in the West are responsible for 80% of the risk to communities. By targeting fire-adapted forests in these specific areas and placing our treatments strategically, we can reduce wildfire impacts not only to homes and communities but also effects on air quality, watersheds, wildlife habitat and other values at risk.   

Over the next decade, we intend to collaborate with partners to treat an additional 20 million acres on National Forest System lands and an additional 30 million acres on federal, state, tribal and private lands.

The days of treating a few million acres a year are behind us. We must reduce fuels at the level of the landscape to meet the threat of catastrophic wildfire at scale. Fire disregards ownership boundaries, and we’ll work across all jurisdictions to carry out this strategy.

Option 3: Block quote

We now have the science and the tools we need to succeed. Science tells us that 10% of the fire-prone areas in the West are responsible for 80% of the risk to communities. By targeting fire-adapted forests in these specific areas and placing our treatments strategically, we can reduce wildfire impacts not only to homes and communities but also effects on air quality, watersheds, wildlife habitat and other values at risk.   

Over the next decade, we intend to collaborate with partners to treat an additional 20 million acres on National Forest System lands and an additional 30 million acres on federal, state, tribal and private lands.

The days of treating a few million acres a year are behind us. We must reduce fuels at the level of the landscape to meet the threat of catastrophic wildfire at scale. Fire disregards ownership boundaries, and we’ll work across all jurisdictions to carry out this strategy.

Option 4: Pull quote

pull quote

We now have the science and the tools we need to succeed. Science tells us that 10% of the fire-prone areas in the West are responsible for 80% of the risk to communities. By targeting fire-adapted forests in these specific areas and placing our treatments strategically, we can reduce wildfire impacts not only to homes and communities but also effects on air quality, watersheds, wildlife habitat and other values at risk.   

Over the next decade, we intend to collaborate with partners to treat an additional 20 million acres on National Forest System lands and an additional 30 million acres on federal, state, tribal and private lands.

The days of treating a few million acres a year are behind us. We must reduce fuels at the level of the landscape to meet the threat of catastrophic wildfire at scale. Fire disregards ownership boundaries, and we’ll work across all jurisdictions to carry out this strategy.

Option 5: Text size increased

We now have the science and the tools we need to succeed. Science tells us that 10% of the fire-prone areas in the West are responsible for 80% of the risk to communities. By targeting fire-adapted forests in these specific areas and placing our treatments strategically, we can reduce wildfire impacts not only to homes and communities but also effects on air quality, watersheds, wildlife habitat and other values at risk.   

Over the next decade, we intend to collaborate with partners to treat an additional 20 million acres on National Forest System lands and an additional 30 million acres on federal, state, tribal and private lands.

The days of treating a few million acres a year are behind us. We must reduce fuels at the level of the landscape to meet the threat of catastrophic wildfire at scale. Fire disregards ownership boundaries, and we’ll work across all jurisdictions to carry out this strategy.