In the months after the Eaton Fire scorched 23 square miles of foothill communities, aircraft carrying LiDAR sensors flew transects over the San Gabriel Mountains. The technology pulses laser light toward the ground millions of times per second, measuring the distance to every surface it strikes. Trees, brush, bare soil, the concrete pads where houses stood. What comes back is a three-dimensional point cloud, a digital skeleton of the landscape precise to the centimeter.
The USGS acquired high-resolution airborne LiDAR specifically for the Palisades and Eaton impact areas. But the post-fire flights were part of something larger. In December 2025, the California Natural Resources Agency and the state's Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force released statewide datasets built from more than 100 million acres of LiDAR data, forty million acres collected through $30 million the Legislature dedicated to wildland remote sensing. For the first time, California has a wall-to-wall picture of its forest and vegetation conditions at the highest resolution available.
The data sees through the canopy to the understory, measuring fuel loads, vegetation density, the vertical structure that determines whether a ground fire stays on the ground or climbs into the crown. It moves wildfire prevention from general estimates to micro-scale modeling. It can show you exactly how much fuel sits on a hillside above a neighborhood.
When the wind comes stays outside any sensor's reach.
CAL FIRE's fuels reduction crews are dedicated to prescribed burns and fuel reduction treatments across the state. In Southern California's chaparral landscape, the work is Sisyphean by nature. Manzanita and chamise resprout from root crowns within weeks of burning, and every rain resets the clock. The crews working the San Gabriel foothills are cutting brush that grew back after the Eaton Fire and will feed whatever comes next. Recovery and prevention overlap so completely here that separating them requires a line the landscape itself refuses to draw. Somewhere below the ridgelines, someone is standing on a cleared lot with architectural plans. Above them, the fuel is already growing back.
The temporal fault line of wildfire adaptation in Southern California runs right through this overlap. The people working above the burn zone are building defensible space for a future fire while the evidence of the last one is still visible from where they stand.
CAL FIRE's fire protection staff has grown from 5,829 to 10,741 positions since 2019. More than $2.5 billion in wildfire resilience funding has flowed since 2020. Nearly 95% of Southern California's wildfires are human-caused.
In September 2025, federal, state, and nonprofit partners signed the Southern California Ignition Reduction Program charter, targeting those human-caused ignitions. The numbers are real. But prevention infrastructure has a geography, and that geography has a pattern. Fuel breaks get built where agencies have jurisdiction and funding aligns. The hillside above a well-documented neighborhood gets mapped before the canyon behind a community that lacks a fire safe council. LiDAR measures every hillside with equal precision. The institutional response follows older, more familiar contours.
In the Santa Monica Mountains, directly adjacent to the Palisades burn zone, the Fire Safe Council is hosting what it calls Wildfire Cafés. The format is facilitated conversation, where people who live in fire country sit together with the weight of what happened and what could happen again. No advice given. Just listening, validation, reflection. The council describes them as spaces for emotional support, judgment-free, one year after the fires.
There is something honest in that framing. The people who show up to a Wildfire Café are doing their own kind of prevention work. They're building the social infrastructure that determines whether a neighborhood evacuates together or fragments, whether someone checks on the elderly couple at the end of the block, whether a community can hold itself together through the next fire and the one after that. This work has no line in any LiDAR dataset or agency budget.
The point cloud measures what's there. Below the ridgeline, someone is standing on a concrete pad with architectural drawings, rebuilding a cottage to a scale of living they chose years ago. Above them, a laser counts every branch.

