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ALERT: FLASH FLOOD WARNING: Oahu in Honolulu, HI — Warning issued April 10 at 4:46PM HST until April 10 at 7:45PM HST by NWS Honolulu HIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Emmet — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Western Chippewa — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Clay, MN — Watch issued April 10 at 9:29PM CDT by NWS Grand Forks NDALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Guam — Watch issued April 11 at 8:05AM ChST until April 15 at 10:00AM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Bayfield — Watch issued April 10 at 1:04PM CDT until April 15 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS Duluth MNFEMA approves major disaster declaration for Tennessee following severe winter storm — Feb. 7, 2026IICRC S520 mold remediation standard cited in 2026 National Defense Authorization Act — Jan. 5, 2026Hawaii receives presidential disaster declaration for flooding — Apr. 8, 2026IICRC S500 consensus body issues position statement on weather-related water damage — Mar. 16, 2026LA wildfire rebuilding: California Insurance Commissioner study shows fire-safe construction cuts losses — Mar. 27, 2026FEMA designates 15 Tennessee counties as natural disaster areas after winter storm — Apr. 6, 2026IICRC S220 standard open for second round of public input — Mar. 27, 2026R&R Magazine: AI adoption reaches 88% of restoration businesses in 2026 — Feb. 18, 2026Commerce Dept. invests $4.9M in disaster supplemental funding for storm-impacted states — Apr. 9, 2026Florida Helene and Milton recovery: FEMA provides ongoing support as long-term recovery continues — Feb. 10, 2026ALERT: FLASH FLOOD WARNING: Oahu in Honolulu, HI — Warning issued April 10 at 4:46PM HST until April 10 at 7:45PM HST by NWS Honolulu HIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Emmet — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Western Chippewa — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Clay, MN — Watch issued April 10 at 9:29PM CDT by NWS Grand Forks NDALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Guam — Watch issued April 11 at 8:05AM ChST until April 15 at 10:00AM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Bayfield — Watch issued April 10 at 1:04PM CDT until April 15 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS Duluth MNFEMA approves major disaster declaration for Tennessee following severe winter storm — Feb. 7, 2026IICRC S520 mold remediation standard cited in 2026 National Defense Authorization Act — Jan. 5, 2026Hawaii receives presidential disaster declaration for flooding — Apr. 8, 2026IICRC S500 consensus body issues position statement on weather-related water damage — Mar. 16, 2026LA wildfire rebuilding: California Insurance Commissioner study shows fire-safe construction cuts losses — Mar. 27, 2026FEMA designates 15 Tennessee counties as natural disaster areas after winter storm — Apr. 6, 2026IICRC S220 standard open for second round of public input — Mar. 27, 2026R&R Magazine: AI adoption reaches 88% of restoration businesses in 2026 — Feb. 18, 2026Commerce Dept. invests $4.9M in disaster supplemental funding for storm-impacted states — Apr. 9, 2026Florida Helene and Milton recovery: FEMA provides ongoing support as long-term recovery continues — Feb. 10, 2026
LIVE|Saturday, April 11, 2026
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Wildfire Home Hardening: The 2026 Guide to Protecting Your Property in Fire-Prone Areas

Home hardening — modifying a structure to resist ignition from wildfire embers, flames, and radiant heat — is the most effective strategy for protecting homes in the wildland-urban interface. Here is what homeowners need to know.

LOS ANGELES — Home hardening — modifying a structure to resist ignition from wildfire embers, flames, and radiant heat — is the most effective strategy for protecting homes in the wildland-urban interface, where the majority of wildfire-related home losses occur.

Research by the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety shows that homes with fire-resistant roofing, enclosed eaves, multi-pane windows, and ember-resistant vents survive wildfires at significantly higher rates than homes without these features — even when surrounded by homes that burn.

The most critical home hardening measure is the roof. Class A fire-rated roofing materials — including concrete tile, metal, and fire-treated wood — are significantly more resistant to ignition from embers than Class B or C materials. Homes with wood shake roofs are at extremely high risk in wildfire conditions.

Defensible space — the buffer zone of reduced vegetation around a home — is a complement to home hardening, not a substitute. CALFIRE recommends Zone 1 (0-30 feet from the home) with low-growing, well-irrigated plants and no combustible materials, and Zone 2 (30-100 feet) with reduced fuel density and spacing between plants.

Several states, including California, Colorado, and Oregon, offer financial incentives for home hardening improvements, including insurance premium discounts, tax credits, and grant programs. Homeowners in fire-prone areas should contact their state insurance commissioner's office and their state forestry agency for information on available programs.

Topics:wildfirehome hardeningdefensible spaceIBHSfire-resistant roofing
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