How the Rapid Spread of Misinformation Pushed Oregon Lawmakers to Kill the State's Wildfire Risk Map
After
This story was originally published by ProPublica.
This is how misinformation gets accepted as fact.
A year after
Around the same time, insurance companies start dropping
The anger quickly spreads. Not only is
By the time the state pulls back the map and starts over, the myths about it have gained so much momentum there's no stopping them.
"This map is destroying their property values," she says.
In the end, what's most remarkable about the campaign against
It's that it worked.
At the time, Zillow hadn't yet come out with risk ratings. By building its own map,
The map results would help
Dunn knew public communication would be important. Before the map was released, a private property rights group had warned its members in a letter that the map and its rules were worrisome. Gov.
Dunn said he was clear with Brown's wildfire director,
(Brown and Grafe did not respond to ProPublica's questions. Grafe told
Without state outreach, many homeowners learned their homes were in "extreme risk" zones from a
Dunn could see that an uproar was building around his work. One community meeting where he was scheduled to present was canceled after state officials received threats of violence.
On Facebook, more than 6,000 people joined a private group, ODF Wildfire Risk Map Support, a base of opposition. ODF stands for the
One member warned that state officials would snoop around their rural properties to tell owners what to do.
"Guys this is a agenda 21," said the member, referencing the conspiracy theory promoted in part by former Fox News talk show host
Along with 31 thumbs-ups, eight angry faces and several other emojis, the post got 24 comments.
State officials' lack of communication with the public "led to really significant challenges," Dunn told ProPublica. "We don't know if we could have well-communicated and sort of avoided those conspiracy theories and misinformation. But it was just so propagated in the media that it just took over."
"It's a really hard adjustment," said Golden, chairperson of the
Misinformation stoked people's anger. "It makes a conversation that would have been difficult at best almost impossible," Golden said.
State officials withdrew the map just over a month after its 2022 release, saying that while they had met the legislative deadline for delivering it, "there wasn't enough time to allow for the type of local outreach and engagement that people wanted, needed and deserved."
After homeowners blamed the newly released risk map for insurance cancellations and premium increases,
Companies filed statements, required by law to be answered truthfully, saying they had not.
"Insurance companies have been using their own risk maps and other robust risk management tools to assess wildfire risk for years in making rating and underwriting decisions," Stolfi said in a news release.
Stolfi told consumers to submit any documentation they received from insurance companies showing that the state's map had been used to influence underwriting or rating decisions.
For good measure, lawmakers in 2023 passed a bill explicitly banning insurers from using the map to set rates.
But as Dunn reworked the map, the cloud of misinformation continued to swirl on social media.
After Zillow and other real estate sites began posting wildfire risk ratings on properties nationwide last year, participants in the anti-map
"Who would decide to move out here after seeing that?" one asked.
Zillow uses data from the research firm
A ProPublica reporter identified himself to the group's participants, asking in June for evidence that they'd been harmed by the state's map. None provided definitive proof. Some acknowledged that they couldn't demonstrate that the map had affected them but said they suspected it lowered their homes' values or their insurability.
Among the respondents was
However, Dalton said, the house's location had been designated as being at moderate risk. That means it was not subject to the state's defensible-space requirements. And even if Dalton's property had been designated as high enough risk to be governed by the new regulations, they had not been finalized at that point and were not being enforced.
"I guess you could say we used common sense to get ahead of future problems," Dalton said.
They re-released it, this time doing more outreach. Following
But the backlash continued. Of the 106,000 properties found to face the highest hazard, more than 6,000 landowners filed appeals. At least one county appealed the designation on behalf of every high-hazard property in its borders — more than 20,000 of them.
In January, a new
Drazan, the House minority leader, led fellow
She told ProPublica she "can't know for sure" that the map caused homeowners to lose insurance or have trouble selling, as she'd asserted at February's news conference. "I am reflecting what we were told," she said.
Regardless, she said, the mandates on protecting properties went too far. "We're not looking for the state to be the president of our homeowner's association and tell us what color our paint can be," Drazan said.
Even Golden, who'd helped shepherd the original bill mandating a map, began to waver.
Golden described conversations with homeowners who struggled to understand why work they'd done to protect their properties from fires didn't lower their state risk rating. He said the map couldn't account for the specific characteristics of each property, ultimately making it clear to him that it couldn't work.
"I got tired of trying to convince people that the model was smarter than they were," Golden said.
Dunn told ProPublica that the map was not intended to reflect all the changing conditions at a particular property, only the hazards that the surrounding topography, climate, weather and vegetation create. It wasn't about whether homeowners had cleared defensible space — just whether they should. The work they do makes their individual homes less vulnerable, he said, but it doesn't eliminate the broader threats around them.
By April, the map was on its way out.
The state
Ahead of a 50-1 vote in the House to kill the map, familiar claims got repeated — including from a legislative leader's office.
Osborne told ProPublica he stood behind his comment even though he had no evidence for it. Osborne said he believed
"I can't give you, you know, here's the perfect example of somebody that, you know, did it, but no insurance company is that foolish," Osborne said. "They're not going to write a statement that would put them in jeopardy. But common sense is going to tell you, when the state is on your side, the insurance companies are going to bail out. And they have."
With or without a map, former
Jones nonetheless called
"One of the biggest public health and safety challenges states are facing are climate-driven, severe-weather-related events," Jones said. "Not giving people useful information to make decisions on that, to me, is not a path to public health and safety."
During the June vote in the
She told ProPublica that by training, the first things she looks for while defending homes in wildland fires are the types of hazards the state intended to target: firewood under the deck, cedar shake siding, flammable juniper bushes growing close to homes.
Grayber said she was disturbed by the sentiment in the
"We are walking away from a very clear decision to build safer, more resilient communities," Grayber said.
The tragedy of it, she said, is "that it was 100% based in misinformation."
Kotek,
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