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Meet Reddy, the grrrl squirrel. Reddy was the brainchild of Mark Blaine, editor of Forest Magazine, which is published by Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics (FSEEE). Blaine needed an activist advertisement to fill space in his magazine. Armed with studies suggesting that Smokey is full of, well, smoke, he created a fire mascot with a new attitude.
Blaine and Andy Stahl, executive director of FSEEE, say that decades of fire suppression by the Forest Service have led to the build-up of deadwood and underbrush below the forest canopy, providing the perfect fuel for a fire season that saw more than 5.7 million acres and 2,500 homes destroyed. “Wildfires are natural occurrences,” says Blaine. “The problem comes when houses are built near the forest.”
U.S. Forest Service scientist Jack Cohen has shown that 85 to 95 percent of houses burned in wildfires could have been saved with a few simple precautions. Cohen’s research suggests that what owners do within 100 feet of their homes has the most effect on whether those homes burn when a wildfire passes through. Reddy, who wears a hardhat and carries a rake, encourages homeowners to trim low-hanging branches and clear brush around their homes. Preparation, says Reddy, not prevention, is the key.
Reddy, who cost her creators just $45, made her debut as the Forest Service was unveiling a new $100,000 campaign for Smokey Bear, changing his message from “Only you can prevent forest fires” to “Only you can prevent wild fires.” The Forest Service issued a statement regarding Reddy: “Smokey Bear is, by law, America’s icon for wildfire prevention.”
“We don’t want to get rid of Smokey,” says Blaine. “But Reddy has a new message for a new generation. She’s a fire mascot who understands forest ecology.”
CONTACTS
Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics
Phone: (541) 484-2692
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