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Town starts ‘Goat Fund Me’ to prevent wildfires

California burg wants to rent herd for brush clearing

By Associated Press
Published: January 12, 2019, 10:04pm
2 Photos
FILE - In this Aug. 16, 2005, file photo, nearly 300 goats from a ranch in southern Oregon are led up to consume as much brush as they can in Sycamore Canyon Park in the hills above Claremont, Calif. The threat of catastrophic wildfires has driven a Northern California town to launch a “Goat Fund Me” campaign to bring herds of goats to city-owned land to help clear brush. Nevada City in the Sierra Nevada began the online crowdsourcing campaign last Dec. 2018, with the goal of raising $30,000 for the project.
FILE - In this Aug. 16, 2005, file photo, nearly 300 goats from a ranch in southern Oregon are led up to consume as much brush as they can in Sycamore Canyon Park in the hills above Claremont, Calif. The threat of catastrophic wildfires has driven a Northern California town to launch a “Goat Fund Me” campaign to bring herds of goats to city-owned land to help clear brush. Nevada City in the Sierra Nevada began the online crowdsourcing campaign last Dec. 2018, with the goal of raising $30,000 for the project. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File) Photo Gallery

NEVADA CITY, Calif.  — The threat of catastrophic wildfires has driven a California town to launch a “Goat Fund Me” campaign to bring herds of goats to city-owned land to help clear brush.

Nevada City in the Sierra Nevada began the online crowdsourcing campaign last month with the goal of raising $30,000 for the project.

The campaign’s website explains that because it takes time to secure grant funding, the town needs money now to hire goat ranchers because they’re only available this winter.

The ranchers have rented out their herds to other municipalities in California the rest of the year and were expanding their herds to meet demand, city officials said.

“Why not do something, and as soon as we can?” Vice Mayor Reinette Senum told the Los Angeles Times. “If we’re not proactive, if we don’t help ourselves, no one else is going to step up.”

The foothill community is about 47 miles southeast of Paradise, which was decimated by a wildfire in November that killed 86 people and destroyed about 14,000 homes.

City officials said booking a herd costs between $500 to $1,500 an acre. Some 200 goats can munch on an acre of overgrown brush daily.

City Manager Catrina Olson said she, and residents attending council meetings to talk about the project, are excited about the idea “that’s catching on because there’s such high fire danger in our state.”

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