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The Aftermath

In the two decades following the turn of the millennium, wildfires came within three miles of an estimated 21.8 million Americans’ homes. That number — which has no doubt grown substantially in the five years since — represents about 6% of the nation’s population, including the survivors of some of the deadliest and most destructive fires in the country’s history. But it also includes millions of stories that never made headlines.

For every Paradise, California, and Lahaina, Hawaii, there were also dozens of uneventful evacuations, in which regular people attempted to navigate the confusing jargon of government notices and warnings. Others lost their homes in fires that were too insignificant to meet the thresholds for federal aid. And there are countless others who have decided, after too many close calls, to move somewhere else.

By any metric, costly, catastrophic, and increasingly urban wildfires are on the rise. Nearly a third of the U.S. population, however, lives in a county with a high or very high risk of wildfire, including over 60% of the counties in the West. But the shape of the recovery from those disasters in the weeks and months that follow is often that of a maze, featuring heart-rending decisions and forced hands. Understanding wildfire recovery is critical, though, for when the next disaster follows — which is why we’ve set out to explore the topic in depth.

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The Surprisingly Tricky Problem of Ordering People to Leave

Wildfire evacuation notices are notoriously confusing, and the stakes are life or death. But how to make them better is far from obvious.

Wildfire evacuation.

Why Relocating After a Wildfire Can Be Impossible

Insurance often leaves homeowners with a devastating choice — to stay in the place where they lost so much, or to give up everything.

Wildfire devastation.

Most Wildfires Never Make Headlines. Here’s What Happened After Two of Them.

More than two years later, hundreds of people in eastern Washington are still struggling to recover.

Rebuilding after a wildfire.

What the Public Doesn’t Know About Fighting Wildfires

Three former hotshots talk about getting up close to the flames, how it changed them, and what could actually prevent future fires.

Hotshots.

The ‘Buffer’ That Can Protect a Town from Wildfires

Paradise, California, is snatching up high-risk properties to create a defensive perimeter and prevent the town from burning again.

The Camp Fire.
The Aftermath Share this series to keep the conversation going