►
From YouTube: 20 de enero - reunión comunitaria de incendio Marshall para los residentes del Condado de Boulder
Description
Subtitulos en español
Esta reunión se centró en la eliminación de escombros y temas de salud pública de las viviendas y los vecindarios afectados en el condado de Boulder. Obtenga más información en www.boco.org/marshallfireespanol #IncendioMarshall
A
A
B
C
A
A
Our
presenters
are
going
to
speak
slowly
and
clearly
and
have
breaths
between
their
sentences
and
what
we
need
you
to
do
as
needing
participants
is
on
the
bottom
of
the
screen
and
the
bar
with
all
the
options
you
have.
We
need
you
to
choose
your
language
as
english
or
spanish,
the
english
channel
will
be
closed.
Captioned
the
spanish
channel
will
not,
and
if
you
click
on
the
spanish
channel,
you
will
have
the
live
interpretation
in
spanish.
A
A
B
My
name
is
gary
santoson,
I'm
the
disaster,
recovery
manager
for
boulder
county,
and
I
just
want
to
first
off
just
let
you
know
that
I
may
look
up
a
little
beat
up,
but
that's
because
I
had
some
successful
skin
cancer
surgery
recently
and
I'm
just
recovering.
So
I
just
want
you
not
to
be
too
alarmed
at
my
appearance.
I
could
be
a
little
off-putting,
but
I'm
doing
fine
and
I'm
happy
to
be
here.
B
I
want
to
just
share
some
announcements
and
some
updates
before
we
jump
into
the
actual
meeting.
First,
I
want
to
acknowledge
that
there
are
a
number
of
representatives
from
elected
officials
joining
us
tonight
from
senator
bennett's
office,
senator
hickenlooper
and
congressman
the
goose,
as
well
as
state
senator
fenberg.
B
B
B
B
Insurance
program,
the
united
policy
holders
insurance
group,
will
be
having
a
workshop
on
roadmap
to
recovery.
This
group
is
a
non-profit
consumer
advocacy
group.
That's
worked
in
disasters
all
over
the
country.
I've
had
the
pleasure
of
working
with
them
since
2010,
and
they
can
really
make
a
difference
in
helping
you
navigate
the
complex
claims
insurance
claims
process.
I
urge
you
to
come
to
that.
B
All
you
have
to
do
is
go
to
our
website,
which
is
I'll,
ask
katie
to
put
in
the
chat,
boco.org
marshallfire
and
on
the
right
side.
You
can
sign
click
on
a
link
and
sign
up
for
that
that
workshop,
and
also
we
will
be
posting.
This
workshop,
the
recording
as
well.
There.
B
We're
not
going
to
be
able
to
answer
every
single
question
you
have,
unfortunately,
just
because
of
time
constraints,
but
also
because
we
don't
know
all
the
answers.
Yet.
This
is
a
a
really
complex
operation
and
challenging
and
we're
learning
as
we
go.
We're
learning
from
other
communities
we're
learning
from
what
we've
done
before,
but
we
we
don't
have
all
those
answers
yet
so
I
just
want.
I
know
that
could
be
frustrating
but
just
bear
with
us.
B
It's
really
important
for
us
to
be
transparent
and
open
and
honest
with
you,
and
we
don't
want
to
set
false
expectations
in
answers
that
that
aren't
reality.
So
please
know
that
so
the
meeting
tonight
is
really
focused
on
the
first
part
on
debris,
removal
and
primarily
for
homes
that
have
been
destroyed.
B
B
D
Thanks
gary,
let
me
get
my
screen
opened
up
here.
B
D
Thank
you
good
evening.
My
name
is
darla
aarons
and
I
am
the
division
manager
for
boulder
county's
resource
conservation
division
and
I'm
also
the
section
chief
for
emergency
support
function,
20,
which
is
our
debris
management
and
I'm
helping
to
lead
the
charge
for
debris,
removal
for
the
marshall
fire,
and
when
I
was
at
the
community
meeting
last
night.
I
just
found
it
really
helpful
and
interesting
that
gary
invited
some
of
the
former
fire
survivors
to
speak
about
their
experience
and
talk
about
expectations
and
timelines.
D
D
D
The
county
provided
household
hazardous
waste
collections,
roll-offs,
hauling,
asbestos
inspections
all
on
our
own,
and
I
wanted
to
put
this
picture
here
in
the
middle,
so
you
can
see
you'll
hear
a
lot
of
talk
about
lined
roll-offs
and
sealed
roll-offs
and
so
that
middle
picture.
There
is
an
example
of
what
we
mean
when
when
we
say
that
this
debris
has
to
be
an
aligned
roll-off
and
then
sealed
before
it
can
be
hauled.
D
Then
we
had
the
2013
flood
and
that
was
a
very
complicated
cleanup
effort
that
had
several
different
facets
to
it.
In
fact,
the
amount
of
debris
generated
in
that
disaster
was
about
ten
times
as
much
as
what's
in
this
disaster,
and
it
took
about
three
years
for
us
to
complete
that
cleanup,
but
it
it
involved
high
hazard
homes
that
were
hanging
over
waterways.
D
D
Scenario,
but
that
one
took
us
three
years
to
get
cleaned
up
then
in
2016
you
see
a
little
consistency
here.
Every
three
years
we
seem
to
be
faced
with
these
challenges.
So
2016
was
the
cold
springs
fire.
We
had
all
those
sites
cleaned
up
in
in
one
month.
Again
it
was
not
a
fema
declared
disaster.
There
were
fewer
properties.
Again
we
worked
with
the
southern
baptists
and
we
provided
hhw
borderlands
water,
portable
and
non-potable
water,
hauling
inspections
on
that
cleanup
effort
as
well,
and
you
can
see
on
the
bottom
photo
there.
D
That
is
a
separated,
scrap
metal,
which
we
find
a
lot
of
in
these
fires,
and-
and
we
do
follow
our
own
zero
waste
principles
as
we're
conducting
these
cleanups.
So
all
the
materials
that
are
able
to
be
diverted
from
the
landfill,
such
as
concrete
and
metal,
the
most
obvious
and
vegetative
debris
they
all
will
be
handled
separately
and
segregated
and
getting
recycled
and
composted.
D
So
moving
into
this
cleanup
effort,
our
phase
one
was
our
community
roll-offs
for
areas
that
had
been
evacuated
and
were
without
power
and
also
who
were
impacted
from
frozen
pipes
and
broken
windows
had
water
damaged
goods.
That
phase
has
already
come
to
a
complete.
We
are
in
phase
two
and
the
vehicle
removal
out
of
the
right-of-way
was
the
first
part
of
phase
2a
that
was
completed
as
of
today
and
we're
moving
into
the
second
part
of
2a,
which
is
the
rest
of
the
right-of-way
removal.
D
So
all
the
hazard,
trees
and
limbs-
and
you
know,
fences
that
have
fallen
downs,
light
posts
things.
Anything
that's
in
the
public
right-of-way
that
could
be
impeding
traffic
for
pedestrians
or
vehicles
is
what
we're
removing
now
and
we're
doing
all
this
work
in
our
2a
phase,
so
that
we
can
clear
the
way
for
the
next
phase
of
our
program,
which
includes
a
curbside
collection
as
well
as
the
private
property
debris
removal.
D
So
then,
after
we
go
through
phase
three,
then
we
get
to
the.
What
I
heard
last
night
is
the
fun
part.
The
rebuilding
and
the
design.
D
E
D
D
D
So
since
we
just
finished
the
vehicle
removal,
I
just
actually
took
the
screen
clipping
out
of
our
page
about
an
hour
ago,
and
so
they,
our
contractor,
is
working
on
those
hazard,
trees
and
limbs
and
vegetative
debris.
So
that's
what
you'll
see
on
the
page.
If
you
look
at
it
today,
you
also
want
to
make
sure
you
know
that
we
have
an
faq
page
again.
I
put
the
link
at
the
bottom
of
this
page,
make
sure
when
you
click
on
this
link.
If
you
are
one
of
those
folks
like
me
that.
B
D
Keep
tabs
open
for
more
than
a
day
in
a
row,
make
sure
you
refresh
that
page
because,
as
gary
mentioned
things
change
daily
and
we're
doing
our
best
to
provide
you
with
the
most
updated
information
and
sometimes
that
changes.
So
please,
when
you
go
to
our
faq
page
click,
the
refresh
button
to
get
the
most
current
information.
D
D
D
D
So
while
we're
doing
the
2a
right-of-way
work,
we'll
allow
the
property
owners
with
wind
and
smoke
damage
to
prepare
to
move
their
items
out
to
the
curb
for
that
phase,
2b
and
then
the
phase
3,
which
I
know
a
lot
of
you
are
interested
in,
is
our
private
property
debris
removal
and
we
are
anticipating
to
begin
that
work
in
february
after
the
phase
2b
is.
D
Done
I've
also
received
some
questions
about.
How
are
you
going
to
prioritize
your
debris?
Removal
work
and
we
are.
We
have
several
factors
in
our
consideration
and
our
prioritization,
one
of
which
is
environmental
justice,
and
so
the
epa
created
an
environmental
justice
screening
tool.
You
can
see
a
little
screenshot
of
it
here.
It
has
environmental
indicators,
demographic
indicators,
environmental
justice
indexes
along
with
variables,
so
we
ran
tables
of
data,
including
all
the
variables
and
all
the
categories.
D
We
then
matched
it
up
with
census
blocks
and
so.
D
The
criteria
and
then
compared
it
with
our
debris,
mapping
online
and
combined
the
maps
so
that
we
could
see
the
areas
that
had
the
most
high
hazards
have
the
most
debris
impacts
and
weigh
that
out
with
the
environmental,
justice
and
demographic
criteria
to
come
up
with
a
prioritized
list
for
our
contractor.
D
We
don't
have
that
determination
back
from
them,
yet
it
will
likely
be
a
few
weeks
before
we
get
that
determination
back,
but
based
on
the
damage
assessments
conducted
by
the
local
building
officials,
we
are
told
that
most
of
these
foundations
are
not
going
to
be
reusable
due
to
the
high
intensity
heat
of
the
fire
they're.
Just
the
foundations
are
just
crumbling.
D
If
you're,
in
a
situation
where
maybe
you
were
on
the
outskirts
or
you
have
your
own
structural
engineer,
your
insurance
company
maybe
sent
somebody
out
and
has
a
different
determination.
Please
talk
to
us
and
we
definitely
will
consider
that
and
want
to
make
sure
that
any
foundation,
that's
reusable,
is
preserved
for
you.
D
All
right,
this
is
a
good
one
that
we've
been
getting
what's
included
in
the
coordinated
debris
removal
program
you
can
see
by
this
slide.
It's
a
lot.
It's
all
your
necessary
permits.
D
It's
air
monitoring,
not
only
personal
air
monitoring
for
the
workers
at
the
site,
but
also
community
monitoring
in
the
streets
and
around
the
areas
that
are
being
cleaned
up.
There's,
traffic
control,
there's
dust
control,
there's
spill
control,
measures,
reporting
and
cleanup
requirements.
There's
stormwater
and
erosion.
Best
management
practices
in
place
at
every
site
before
cleanup
work
begins.
D
All
the
equipment
needed
to
provide
the
cleanup
of
the
sites
is
provided
the
debris,
removal,
crews
and
all
the
ancillary
crews
for
the
testing
are
also
included.
An
independent
property
assessment
is
provided
property
damage.
Liability
is
with
the
contractor,
they're
certified
asbestos
crews,
there's
proper
handling
and
separation
of
the
waste
streams
from
trained
professionals.
D
There's
a
certified
arborist
to
make
sure
that
any
tree
that
is
removed
is
in
fact
a
hazard
tree
and
deemed
to
not
to
either
already
be
dead
or
to
not
be
living
in
five
years.
There's
a
capping
of
all
your
utilities
and
then
there's
a
closure
plan
sign
off
again
by
that
third
party.
D
All
right,
I
wanted
to
try
to
keep
my
presentation
relatively
short,
because
I
had
just
received
some
of
the
advanced
questions
that
you
had
sent
in,
and
there
were
quite
a
few,
so
I
thought
I
should
just
cut
it
off
there
and
turn
over
to
answer
some
of
the
questions
so
katie,
I
don't
know
if
you
have
those
or
if
you
want
me
to
pull
some
of
them
up
myself.
A
No
I'll
help
so
that
you
can
just
focus
on
the
answers
and
I'll
throw
the
questions.
Your
way
and
questions
that
are
coming
in
the
chat
are
going
to
be
chatted
to
me,
so
you
don't
need
to
worry
about
that
either.
Okay,
so
a
main
question
that
we
have
in
the
chat
and
that
we
got
in
advance
is
who
is
paying
for
it
and
an
explanation
of
how
it
works
if
insurance
is
giving
some
of
the
money
and
not
all
of
it
or
if
insurance
is
not
clippering,
all
of
it.
D
That
is
a
popular
question
and
what
I
can
say
is
is
again
we're
waiting
for
final
approval
from
fema
on
our
debris
removal
program
and
again
we
have
requested
that
fema
approve
a
program,
that's
similar
to
the
programs
we've
used
in
in
previous
disasters,
where,
if
there
is
an
outstanding
cost
for
an
individual
property
that
that
cost
gets
applied
to
the
overall
project
cost
and
not
be
billed
back
to
a
property
owners,
that's
just
how
we've
done
in
the
past.
D
So
that's
what
we
have
requested
and
then
the
county
would
be
responsible
to
cover
the
local
government
cost
share
of
the
program
where
fema
public
assistance
would
cover
it's
typically
75
of
the
cost.
So
then
the
county
superior
lewis
would
would
respectively,
have
their
cost
share
against
that
75
percent
or
whichever
percent
fema
determines.
A
D
Okay,
so
driveways
are
included
under
the
foundations
and
slab
category
that
we
have
requested,
but
we
again
are
waiting
for
fema
determination,
landscaping,
so
any
landscaping
that
is
charred
destroyed
will
be
removed.
If
it's,
if
it's
deemed
dead
or
not
going
to
live,
it
will
be
removed.
Any
landscaping
that
is
not
damaged
will
be
preserved.
D
We
want
to
preserve
as
much
of
the
landscape
as
possible
and
vehicles,
property
owners,
vehicle
owners
need
to
call
their
insurance
company
and
get
their
insurance
agent
out
there
to
inspect
their
vehicle
and
work
with
their
insurance
company
to
get
their
vehicle
towed,
and
I
I'll
let
the
insurance
experts
answer
that
question
in
more
detail,
because
there
are
specifics
about
what
kind
of
coverage
you
have
and
whether
your
insurance
company
will
be
able
to
tow
that
and,
and
just
as
an
example,
if
you
don't
have
any
car
insurance
on
your
vehicle
that
that's
something
that
we
are
trying
to
figure
out
still.
A
D
Yes,
we
so
condos
are
under
the
commercial
property
category
and
those
are
not
automatically
included
in
our
private
property
debris
removal
program.
A
A
D
This
includes
air
quality,
water
quality,
storm
water
quality,
as
well
as
personal
safety
through
traffic
control,
the
health
and
safety
of
residents
that
are
within
and
near
the
impacted
areas
are
a
top
priority
for
boulder
county,
and
our
program
is
intended
to
remove
disaster-caused
public
health
and
safety
hazards
within
the
burn
area
so
where
homes
are
still
standing
and
where
residents
still
live.
We
understand
that
so
in
performing
this
work,
the
county
will
work
with
our
contractor
to
minimize
any
secondary
impacts
to
the
residents
and
standing
structures
that
are
nearby
to
aid.
B
A
D
So
when
the
property
is
cleaned,
the
soil
will
be
scraped
anywhere
from
two
to
six
inches,
that
soil
will
be
tested
and
the
utilities
will
be
capped.
A
D
A
Thanks
darla,
and
so
many
of
these
questions
are
so
tricky
and
do
involve
legal
advice
and
that's
part
of
why
we
some
of
the
questions.
We
may
not
be
answering
right
now,
because
we
need
the
legal
advice,
so
we're
going
to
work
on
like
gary
said
we're
not
gonna,
have
all
the
answers
tonight
and
we're
just
we're
working
really
hard
to
get
all
the
answers.
A
Oh,
I
had
a
question.
I.
A
B
Yeah
so
two
questions:
I'm
noticing
can,
can
people
opt
out
anytime
before
their
their
property?
Is
the
debris
is
removed
from
their
property
and
how
do
they
do
that.
D
I
will
say
that
we
have
a
new
extension
that
is
likely
going
to
be
granted
that
more
aligns
with
our
planning
efforts,
and
so,
since
our
planning
efforts
have
been
extended
about
another
week,
it's
likely
that
we
are
going
to
extend
that
rate
of
entry
out
until
february
1st.
B
D
From
our
damage
assessments
data,
we
show
about
20
of
those
homes
that
fall
under
fema
standards,
where,
if
there
are
two
or
more
contiguous
walls,
fema
deems
them
damaged
and
not
destroyed,
and
our
building
officials
have
a
different
opinion
that
they
in
fact
are
destroyed
because
they're
hollow
inside
and
basically
have
this
facade
of
walls.
And
that's
all
that's
standing.
B
E
A
So
I
think
we
need
to
do
one
more
explanation
of
the
costs,
because
we're
still
getting
a
lot
of
questions
about
the
cost
people
nervous
about
opting
in
for
the
costs.
So
let
me
give
you
an
example
to
see
if
we
can
walk
it
through,
if
someone's
insurance
company
is
giving
them
five
thousand
dollars
for
debris
removal.
D
A
Why
don't
you
explain
the
prior
experience
process
again
so
that
we
just
have
it
again
for
the
audience
members.
D
Okay,
so
again
it
each
I'm
sure,
you've
all
learned.
Each
insurance
policy
is
so
unique
with
what
coverage
they
have
and
even
if
you
have
five
thousand
dollars
of
debris,
removal
coverage
depending
on
how
your
policy
is
written,
your
insurance
company
could
require
you
to
take
from
other
parts
of
your
policies.
D
Boulder
county
would
collect
the
five
thousand
dollars
put
it
towards
the
overall
project,
cost
for
the
whole,
coordinated
debris,
removal
effort
and
then
that
five
thousand
dollars
that
goes
towards
the
project
cost
is
where
that
75
fema
share
comes
in
or
whatever
percentage
they
determine
so
a
fema
says
75
percent,
and
then
the
state
could
have
a
share
of
that.
The
county
could
have
a
share
of
that
and,
if
you're
in
louisville
or
superior
they
could
have
a
share
of
that.
A
D
And
on
that
note,
anybody
who
has
not
submitted
a
right
of
entry
form
yet
was
contacted
today
there
is
other
stormwater
protection
work
that
our
stormwater
folks
would
like
to
complete
and
they
need
your
right
of
entry
form
completed.
There
is
an
option
on
there
if
you
haven't
made
up
your
mind
yet
about
whether
you
want
to
participate
in
the
county
or
the
coordinated
debris
removal
or
do
your
own,
that's
totally
fine.
D
D
That'll
take
some
time
to
develop.
You
know
a
week,
maybe
two
weeks
and
once
that
drop
is
developed,
it
will
have
the
neighborhood
and
we're
going
by
census
blocks
in
this
case.
So
neighborhoods
within
the
census,
blocks
identified
and
advanced
notice
will
go
out
so,
for
example,
for
a
right-of-way
vehicle
removal
work
that
went
out
through
press
release.
D
There
was
a
direct
email
that
sent
out
our
pio
messaged
on
all
the
next
door,
neighborhoods
where
the
work
was
being
completed,
and
so
there
will
be
multiple
avenues
of
notification
happening
and
for
vehicle
owners
again
they're
getting
a
direct
letter
sent
to
them
so
as
much
direct
communication
as
we
can
achieve,
we
we
are
in
as
much
advanced
notification
that
we
can
provide.
We
are.
A
A
That's
going
to
be
true
for
rebuilding
as
well.
So
we
will
work
on
faq
answers
with
those
jurisdictions
to
try
to
get
answers
for
each
jurisdiction
to
help
with
that.
Yeah.
D
A
D
B
Yeah
retaining
walls
are
they
included.
D
Retaining
walls,
that's
a
tricky
question
gary,
based
on
our
damage
assessment
data.
Some
retaining
walls
are
okay
and
others
are
not,
and
so
we're
working
with
fema
to
review
those
and
make
a
determination.
D
It's
similar
if
it's
destroyed,
you
know
any
so
a
fencing,
that's
destroyed
that
that's
a
hazard.
So
that's
how
fema
looks
at
it
is.
If,
if
the
fence
could
fall
over
and
hurt
somebody
or
fall
over
into
a
sidewalk,
that's
a
threat
and
we
need
to
get
rid
of
it.
B
So
one
of
the
questions
that
comes
up
a
lot
is
comparing.
Should
I
go,
do
it
myself
and
hire
a
contractor,
or
should
I
go
through
the
coordinated
program,
and
so
can
you
maybe
speak
to
what
are
the
requirements
for
doing
it
on
your
own
and
and
help
people?
One
of
the
questions
is:
does
the
contractor
have
to
provide
all
the
monitoring
and
sign
off
or
is
that
the
responsibility
of
the
homeowner?
D
Well,
if
you
choose
to
do
your
own
work
as
property
owner,
you
are
responsible
for
making
sure
that
you
follow
all
the
guidance
and
rules
and
regulations
of
your
jurisdiction.
D
Your
contractor
will
take
on
liability
for
the
work
that
they're
completing,
and
so
it
really
depends
on
who
you
hire
and
what
sort
of
team
they
bring
to
the
table
and
what
expertise
that
they
bring,
and
in
that
situation
you
oftentimes
have
to
hire
multiple
contractors,
because
a
demo
contractor
usually
isn't
a
certified
asbestos
administrator
and
who
isn't
a
soil
specialist.
Who,
isn't
you
know
the
air
quality
specialist?
D
So
I
think
to
get
back
to
your
original
question
in
terms
of,
if
there's
any
benefit,
I
think
it's
just
knowing
that
everything
from
agency
is
being
taken
care
of
in
the
county
program
and
and
there's
a
list
it's
on
our
faq
page,
that
has
requirements
on
it.
If
you're
doing
the
work
yourself,
we
try
to
make
it
as
transparent
as
we
can
for
you
so
check
that
out
on
the
faq,
so
you
can
make
the
best
decision
for
yourself.
B
Okay-
and
I
have
one
more-
I
think
some
of
the
concern
is
that
the
deadline
to
sign
the
right
of
entry
to
opt
in
is
before
fema
even
makes
a
determination
about
the
program.
So
people
I
think,
are
feeling
concerned
that,
how
do
we
make
an
informed
decision
to
opt
in
if
we
don't
really
know
the
full,
whether
or
not
the
program's
been
approved
or
whether
what
form
it
might
take
so
is?
Is
it
is
there
consideration
of
delaying
that
opt-in
until
fema
makes
its
decision.
D
B
A
So
just
I
gary,
I
know
we're
gonna,
wrap
up
and
move
on
to
the
next
speaker
darla.
I
wanted
to
let
you
know
that
there
are
some
comments
in
the
chat
and
the
questions
about
people
who
have
not
yet
signed
the
right
of
entry
form
and
did
not
get
a
notification
today.
So
I
just
wanted
to
let
you
know
that
there's
a
handful
of
people
in
the
chat
that
are
saying
that,
so
we
may
need
to
look
into
that.
A
So
I
know
that
may
leave
more
questions
and
answers.
The
debris
team
is
working
on
the
faq
from
the
debris
team
is
pretty
much
updated
daily,
if
not
more
often
than
that
so
keep
coming
back.
A
If
we
need
to
have
another
degree,
town
hall,
we
can
look
into
that
and,
like
darla
said,
all
of
our
previous
experiences
are
much
smaller,
so
we're
having
to
scale
up
and
answer
our
questions
just
as
much
as
you
have
questions
to
answer.
So
thank
you
for
your
patience
and
grace
in
listening
to
our
answers.
This
point
back
to
you
gary.
B
We've
received
what
330
questions
in
the
chat
we
received
about
60
questions
in
the
last
day,
or
so
we
will
do
our
best
to
go
through
them
and
and
respond
to
them
and
add
to
the
faq
document
that
darla
refer
to
in
the
website
if
they're
not
already
covered
there.
So
I
urge
you
to
go
to
that
website
and
and,
as
I
said
before,
we're
learning
new
information
every
day,
so
we
will
continue
to
update
that
website
with
with
the
best
and
updated
information
as
possible.
B
So,
as
I
said,
the
next
part
of
the
meeting
is
really
about
how
to
understand
the
risks
associated
with
returning
to
your
home.
So
so
folks,
who
are
on
on
the
call
who
who
lost
your
homes,
you
don't
need
to
stay
for
this
portion.
If
you
don't
want
to,
I
probably
urge
you
not
to
just
given
my
past
experience,
it's
sometimes
kind
of
hard
and
frustrating
to
hear
about
people's
concerns
who
still
have
a
home,
and
you
don't
so.
I
want
you
to
think
about
taking
care
of
yourself.
B
E
Thank
you.
Gary
gary
is
going
to
help
me
by
driving
the
powerpoint.
E
I
want
to
take
this
opportunity
to
express
my
gratitude
for
being
able
to
share
tonight
with
you
all
what
the
role
of
boulder
county
public
health
is
in
this
response
and
recovery,
and
I
I
might
take
that
grace
to
go
over
those
bits
and
pieces
of
our
roles
and
responsibilities
with
you
so
that
I
hope
it
it
sets
the
stage
for
why,
as
has
been
the
theme
of
our
evening
here,
we
might
not
be
able
to
answer
all
of
your
questions,
but
we
will
try.
E
We
are
actually
also
a
separate
legal
entity
and,
and
we
receive
our
oversight
from
the
boulder
county
board
of
health,
they
are
appointed
by
the
boulder
county
commissioners.
E
What
I
share
with
you
tonight
is
is
really
what
our
responsibilities
were
and
continue
to
be
in
the
response
and
recovery.
We
collaborate
with.
You
know
the
boulder
county
office
of
emergency
management
with
the
sheriff's
department
and
with
so
many
other
colleagues
within
the
county
structure.
But
what
I'll
describe
tonight
to
help
set
the
stage
of
what
our
role
is
is
is
only
about
boulder
county
public
health.
E
So
in
in
this
particular
event.
As
with
many
you
know,
we
are
trained
as
local
public
health
officials
to
respond
to
to
many
types
of
disasters,
and
in
this
case
we
worked
right
along
other
first
responders
and
other
professionals,
at
the
time
of
the
event,
to
support
evacuations,
to
to
provide
shelters
with
masks
and
testing
kits,
because,
probably
how
you've
gotten
to
know
us
over
the
last
couple
of
years
is
because
of
the
pandemic
response.
E
We
have
been
trying
to
share
information
relative
to
what
our
local,
federal
and
state
partners
do
in
a
fire
response
or
with
information
about
about
what
to
do
in
a
fire
to
direct
you
to
appropriate
resources
and
and
again
we
collaborate
with
the
colorado
department
of
public
health
and
environment
and
with
many
other
state
and
federal
agencies
and
and
our
regular
roles
do
include
and
will
include
in
this
response
to
monitor
some
of
our
health
indicators
to
mobilize
community
partnerships
locally
and
at
the
state
level,
especially
to
address
health
issues
that
we
are
expected
to
see
in
the
future
relative
to
this
response
and
always
to
inform,
educate
and
empower
our
community
to
address
the
health
issues.
E
We've
also
reached
out
to
to
other
important
collaborators
that
can
assist
us
in
gathering
data,
we're
we're
reaching
out
to
a
pulmonologist
and
their
team,
and
also
looking
at
syndromic
surveillance
data
so
that
we
can
understand.
If
community
members
have
experienced
any
health
effects.
And
that's
why
I
say
in
this
response
and
the
recovery,
which
has
felt
a
little
bit
simultaneous
at
times.
E
We
are,
are
working
hard
to
try
to
answer
your
questions,
your
very
valid
questions
about
health
concerns.
We
have
standard
operating
duties
that
we
perform
as
a
local
health
department.
You
know
we.
E
We
address
family
health,
community
health,
communicable
disease
and
environmental
health
issues
on
a
daily
basis,
and
all
of
us
have
been
participating
in
some
in
some
capacity
in
the
response
and
recovery.
E
We
do
all
of
this
work
on
on
both
ends
and
during
the
pandemic,
to
keep
all
of
this
going
and
so
we're
we're
especially
grateful
for
all
the
collaboration
that
we've
had
with
our
partners,
which
is
also
a
part
of
our
statutory
responsibility,
especially
in
the
areas
of
a
fire
response,
as
they
relate
to
air
quality.
E
We
do
that
and
in
addition,
at
our
own
initiative,
installed
particulate
monitors
in
and
around
the
burn
area,
approximately
seven
days
after
the
fire,
and
we
are
working
to
install
additional
monitors
so
that
we
can
provide
you
with
the
most
up-to-date
information
on
the
data
that
comes
out
of
that
particulate
monitoring,
really
monitoring
air
quality.
You
should
know
actually
before
the
fire
was
one
of
our
very
small
responsibilities.
E
It
is
not
a
large
part
of
our
operations
and
actually,
if
you're
a
person
like
me
who
observes
getting
a
push
from
their
weather
application
on
their
phone
about
air
quality,
those
do
not
come
from
your
local
health
department.
E
E
E
Is
not
of
a
standard
that
that
we
feel
is
is
safe,
and
so
I
visited
a
school
board
meeting
last
week
and
addressed
concerns
about
that
parents
had
about
sending
their
children
to
school
in
and
around
the
burn
area
and
simply
stated.
E
The
other
thing
we
do
always
as
well
is
inspect
for
septic
installation
and,
and
so
that
could
be
a
part
of
some
of
the
questions.
I
know
that
that
folks
have
had
and
that
were
submitted
in
advance,
and
I
can
go
into
that
later.
What
we
do
not
do,
unfortunately,
is
regulate
home
or
soil
inspections
or
determine
by
a
home
visit
or
any
kind
of
assessment
in
your
home
if
your
home
is
safe,
and
so
that
could
be
some
of
the
questions
that
we
continue
to.
E
Next
slide,
please
we've
been
providing
general
guidance
to
the
community
and-
and
that
does
include
you
know,
people
with
respiratory
illnesses
are
advised
to
consult
with
their
health
care
provider
before
entering
a
burn
area.
We
want
you
to
be
aware
that
poor
air
quality
can
cause
some
of
the
same
symptoms
as
covin
19.
E
E
I
want
us
to
know
that
we
are
still
in
a
pandemic
and
the
numbers
of
cases
of
covet
19,
especially
because
of
the
omicron
variant,
are
sky
high
right
now,
and
I
appreciate
the
the
care
and
concern
that
our
first
responders
and
that
our
emergency
operations
staff
gave
to
to
leaning
on
public
health,
for
testing
kits
and
for
kn
95
masking
for
the
shelters
and
for
you
community
members
that
visited
the
disaster
assistance
center
during
this
time,
because
this
community
certainly
has
been
through
so
much
and
and
to
continue
to
work
to
prevent
illness,
severe
illness
and
death
relative
to
this
pandemic
is
important
and
even
harder
to
do
when
one
is
responding
to
such
a
tragedy.
E
I
also
want
to
acknowledge
that
traumatic
events
can
trigger
mental
health
and
behavioral
health
needs,
and
I
know
that
through
our
work
at
the
disaster
assistance
center
we've
been
sharing
how
you
can
get
help
in
that
regard,
and-
and
certainly
you
can
visit
our
websites
to
to
find
more
information
about
that.
But
I
wanted
to
acknowledge
that
it's
so
important
for
you
to
get
that
help.
E
If
you
need
it,
because
the
stresses
the
concerns
that
you
are
expressing
tonight
and
the
stresses
you
are
experiencing
likely
as
a
result
of
this
tragic
event,
especially
as
evidenced
by
the
hundreds
of
questions
that
you
are
asking
and
that
you
need
answers
to,
can
truly
make
coping
with
this
challenging,
and
so
I'm
I'm
urging
you
to
to
take
care
of
yourselves
in
that
regard.
E
The
other
issue
that
you
know,
perhaps
I'll
answer
in
some
of
the
questions
that
you've
provided
or
that
you
are
sharing
in
the
chat,
is
that,
of
course,
any
of
the
the
conditions
relative
to
air
quality
and
the
efforts
that
boulder
county
public
health
is
making
relative
to
measuring
air
quality
can
change
right.
Now
we
are
seeing
wet
soil
and
even
a
bit
of
snow
and
ice
on
top
of
the
debris,
and
we
know
that
our
our
messages
will
likely
change
when
our
soils
dry
up.
E
I
also
urge
you
to
go
to
a
website
called
purpleair.com.
If
you
have
not
been
there,
I
urge
you
to
go
it's
very
easy
to
use.
When
you
arrive,
you
press
a
button
and
you
can
view
a
map
of
where
the
existing
particulate
monitors
are
in
our
county
and
you
can
see
real-time
readings
about
their
measurement
of
the
air
and
its
quality,
and
so
with
that
said,
that
actually
ends
my
presentation
portion.
E
Thank
you
for
giving
me
the
opportunity
to
share
a
bit
about
the
roles
and
responsibilities
of
boulder
county,
public
health
and
katie
or
gary.
I'm
I'm
at
the
ready
to
try
to
answer
questions
of
our
public
about
public
health
or
air
quality.
Thank
you.
B
Great
thanks
camille,
let's
have
carrie
wait
with
the
united
policyholders,
give
her
presentation
and
then
after
that,
we'll
go
into
the
questions
for
both
of
you.
So
thank
you,
carrie
for
about
10
minutes
or
less.
Please
go
for
it.
C
I'll
do
my
best
thank
you
gary
and
thank
you
folks
for
just
taking
the
initiative
to
be
present
here
and
to
glean
all
the
information
you
can
to
help
you
in
your
recovery.
C
C
So
hopefully,
a
lot
of
that
will
be
fleshed
out
in
the
not
too
distant
future,
and
you
know
that
will
be
something
that
you
can
get
done
and
passed
and
on
to
other
things.
B
C
This
is
the
marshall
fire,
curated
library,
landing
page.
The
second
line
at
the
title
here
of
this
slide
is
the
address
online
to
the
link
to
reach
this
page.
You've
probably
seen
it
in
multiple
different
locations,
and
we
were
present
at
the
disaster
assistance
center
and
have
been,
and
we
will
remain
present
with
boulder
county
through
this
recovery.
C
We
are
grateful
to
the
community
foundation
of
boulder
who
is
helping
fund
us,
since
we
are
a
non-profit.
We
do
not
take
money
from
anyone
other
than
individual
donations
and
grants,
and
that
type
of
thing,
so
we
are
able
to
be
independent
and
give
you
straight
talk
on
how
to
recover
your
insurance
funds
lots
of
good
resources
online.
C
I
am
going
to
show
links
as
we
go
along
at
the
bottom
and
along
the
way
in
the
slides,
and
these
slides
will
be
available
to
you
in
pdf
format.
C
So
I
have
more
slides
than
I
have
time
to
review,
but
I
recommend
you,
you
download
the
pdf.
It
should
be
available.
I
think
gary
said
they
were
going
to
put
it
in
the
chat
and
we
will
have
it
available
on
our
website
as
well,
so
that
you
can
use
these
reference
slides
going
forward.
C
So
the
primary
issue
that
I
wanted
to
make
sure
we
addressed
today
are
issues
that
we
are
hearing
about
where
many
people
with
damaged
homes
or
standing
homes
that
have
been
impacted
by
smoke
and
ash
and
possibly
heat,
are
being
told
by
insurers
that,
when
the
water
and
gas
are
back
on
that
the
home
is
habitable
and
able
able
to
be
moved
back
into.
C
Also
many
people
are
just
so
anxious
to
get
home,
so
there
is
a
rush
to
move
back
in.
I
moved
back
in
as
soon
as
I
was
allowed
into
my
standing
home.
I
just
want
to
encourage
you
if
you
are
not
living
in
that
standing
home.
C
Try
not
to
move
back
in.
If
there
is
evidence
of
ash
and
smoke,
that's
entered
your
home,
even
if
you
really
aren't
sure
to
what
extent
the
damage
is.
We
really
encourage
you
to
move
with
caution,
as
you
heard
from
your
public
health
folks,
there
are
a
lot
of
potential
dangers
and
concerns.
C
While
your
home
is
tested
and
mitigated,
if
you
are
already
back
in
the
home,
doesn't
mean
you
shouldn't
ask
for
that,
and
and
and
that
does
often
get
approved,
with
the
right
backup
and
documentation,
but
move
ahead
with
caution
when
going
home,
we
have
a
number
of
of
documents
that
I'm
going
to
provide
you
the
links
for
that
will
help
you
step
by
step,
go
through
some
of
the
choices
you
need
to
make
a
lot
of
the
residues
that
can
harm
your
health
or
that
will
cause
long-term
issues
in
restoring
a
standing
home
after
a
wildfire
are
not
easy
to
see
with
the
naked
eye.
C
If
there
are
members
of
your
household
who
have
chemical
sensitivities,
very
young,
very
old,
certain
pets,
people
with
a
history
of
respiratory
illness
or
that
are
immunosuppressed,
it
is
especially
important
for
you
to
move
with
caution,
notify
your
insurer
of
your
special
circumstances
and
consult
with
a
physician
before
moving
back
into
that
standing
home.
C
C
That's
a
term
you're,
probably
going
to
want
to
learn
about,
and
I'll
talk
more
about
as
we
go
any
evidence
of
smoke
or
ash.
That's
entered
your
home.
I
mean
windowsills
through
doorways
through
the
attic
vents
anything
like
that
is
justifiable
reason
to
want
testing
to
ensure
that
your
home
is
safe
before
you
re-inhabit
it.
C
C
Perhaps
you
have
a
family
member
who
is
willing
to
take
you
in,
but
there
are
additional
costs
to
them
associated
with
that
and
you'd
like
to
make
sure
those
costs
get
covered.
You
can
document
those
costs
and
additional
living
expenses
can
be
reimbursed
to
you
from
your
insurance
company.
In
many
cases.
For
that,
especially
when
there
is
such
a
shortage
of
housing
available,
we
have
to
be
agile
and
creative,
sometimes
and
and
the
insurers
are
encouraged
to
to
do
that.
C
So
when
a
loss
insured
from
a
covered
peril-
and
in
this
case
it's
fire
and
smoke
and
fire
are
really
the
same
peril.
You
know
one
comes
right
along
with
the
other
and
so
smoke
is
a
direct
result
of
fire
and
most,
if
not
all,
homeowners
policies
in
colorado
have
fire
and
smoke
as
a
covered
loss.
C
If
that
fire
and
smoke
cause
your
resonance,
the
covered
resonance
to
become
uninhabitable
or
unfit
to
live
in
you're
generally
owed
ale,
additional
living
expense
under
most
policies
that
additional
living
expense
has
a
time
limit.
It
may
be
in
a
renter's
policy
two
weeks
it
may
be
in
a
homeowner's
policy
up
to
24
months
in
colorado
and
in
under
special
circumstances.
It
may
even
be
possible
to
extend
that
a
bit
further.
C
Let's
see
my
toolbar
is
kind
of
in
the
way.
Let
me
see
if
I.
C
Okay,
I
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
tips
for
self-documenting,
the
initial
intrusion
of
smoker
ash
and
the
need
for
ale
benefits.
So
you
may
need
to
send
some
documentation
to
your
insurer
or
to
ask
your
insurer
to
come
out
and
inspect
further
or
test
so
that
they
will
approve
that
you
can
live
in
a
safe
environment.
While
your
home
is
evaluated
and
remediated
take
a
close-up,
look
and
photos
and
videos
of
your
windowsills.
C
C
You
can
you
know
document
that
you
can
go
to
sources
like
your
public
health
department
and
the
purple
air
and
google
earth
that
can
help
demonstrate
where
his
smoke,
plume
and
particulates
have
been
on
the
day
of
the
fire
and
following
that
and
then
you
can
take
lots
of
pictures
yourself
of
the
debris
and
ash
and
the
proximity
to
the
burn
of
your
home.
C
I
suggest
you
document
document
document.
Your
goals
in
a
standing,
partial
loss
are
generally
going
to
be
to
restore
your
home
to
its
pre-loss
condition.
Sometimes
that
means
cleaning.
Sometimes
that
means
replacing
things
repairing
things.
It
may
mean
that
your
carpet
and
floors
need
to
be
replaced
and
refinished
and
the
walls
painted
in
insulation
pulled
out
and
any
number
of
other
things,
but
the
level
of
damage
to
your
home
is
directly
related
to
the
amount
of
infestation
and
the
amount
of
heat
your
home
is
experienced.
C
So
the
initial
testing
super
important-
and
I
encourage
you
to
come
to
our
website,
sign
up
for
the
updates
it
on
our
emails
about
our
coming
events
and
gary's
put
in
the
chat
our
first
orientation
event,
which
will
be
january
27th.
C
B
A
Camille
and
maybe
camille
and
carrie
could
stay
on
video
because
I'm
gonna
punt
questions
both
your
ways
and
we
only
have
nine
minutes
until
the
meeting's
over
so
it'll
just
be
a
couple.
What.
A
E
E
Let
me
know
that
if
it's
good
with
you
and
gary
katie,
we
can
compile
a
list
of
the
unanswered
questions
and
post
them
on
our
boulder
county
public
health
website
or
provide
them
to
you
and
gary,
so
that
you
can
post
them
as
well
in
a
place
and
space
where
all
of
our
participants
tonight
can
check
on
the
follow-up.
I
will
give
to
their
question
on
this
one,
but
I
don't
have
an
answer
tonight.
I'm
sorry.
A
That
process
would
be
really
helpful,
camille
and
yeah,
so
we'll
we
just
saw
all
the
residents
know
who
are
still
on
this
call.
The
recording
of
the
call
will
be
up
tomorrow
sometime.
A
It
will
probably
take
us
about
a
week
to
get
questions
of
first
version
of
questions
answered
and
then
we'll
roll
out
additional
questions,
as
we
have
them
another
question
for
you
camille.
We
have
a
lot
of
comments
in
questions
in
the
chat
talking
about.
A
E
E
But
it
is
the
best
place
at
this
point
to
go
to
and
I'll
expound
more
in
our
faq
about
what
our
colorado
department
of
public
health
and
environment
staff
are
doing.
I
know
just
today
they
posted
an
faq,
for
example,
on
indoor
air
quality,
very
general
advice.
I
was
pleased
to
see
it
and-
and
we
will
continue
to
to
work
with
our
partners
there
to
provide
you
with
more
information,
and
it
really
is
focusing
on
boulder
county,
which
I
thought
was
very
helpful.
A
C
If
you
don't
have
renter's
insurance,
then
our
suggestions
would
be
that
you
connect
as
soon
as
possible
with
all
the
long-term
recovery,
folks
that
you
have
there
in
your
community
and
in
boulder
county,
including
the
community
foundation
of
boulder,
and
that
you
sign
up
for
fema.
Since
this
is
a
fema
declared
disaster
and
there
is
individual
assistance,
you
may
well
be
able
to
get
lots
of
help
that
way.
A
A
C
So
that's
kind
of
a
long
and
detailed
answer,
but
it
depends
on
the
terms
of
your
policy.
If
you
have
one
year
in
your
policy,
then
that
is
sort
of
the
fixed
limit.
However,
the
division
of
insurance
has
issued
some
guidance
in
the
way
of
a
bulletin,
which
is
like
a
suggestion,
a
strong
suggestion
to
insurers
that
this
disaster
is
going
to
take
a
long
time
to
to
get
things
resolved.
So
there
is
hope
that
there
could
be
extensions
and
we
don't
get
what
we
don't
ask
for.
C
So
I
suggest
again,
please
attend
our
orientation
on
the
27th
and
go
online
and
we
have
lots
of
resources.
Kind
of
search
around
our
landing
page
is
a
step-by-step
process
that
can
help
you
work
through
finding
answers
to
your
questions.
A
Thanks
carrie
gary,
should
we
pass
it
back
to
you
or
if
you
have
any
questions
and
or
wrap
up.
B
Sure
I
want
to
thank
camille
and
kerry
for
your
time
and
sharing
these
resources
and
being
willing
to
take
a
look
at
these
questions
that
we
couldn't
answer
today
and
post
them
on
the
website.
B
B
We
will
continue
to
offer
these
town
halls
and
post
information
on
the
website,
which
is
boco.org
marshallfire.
It's
in
the
chat,
that's
where
you
can
go,
find
the
presentations
where
you
can
find
the
recording
of
this
meeting
and
the
faq
frequently
asked
question
documents,
so
I
I
just
again
want
to
just
thank
you
all
for
coming
out.
I
know
this
is
it's
hard?
It's
it's
challenging!
B
There
are
a
lot
of
unknowns.
Still
it's
going
to
take
a
good
amount
of
time,
as
darla
presented
from
past
disasters,
so
remember
to
take
care
of
yourself
and
your
family.
That's
that's
job
number.
One
is
make
sure
that
you
all
are
healthy
and
can
continue
to
work
on
this
recovery
for
the
long
haul.
We
are
not
going
anywhere
the
county,
the
cities
we
in
the
town
we're
not
going
anywhere.
Our
staff
are
committed
to
working
with
you
and
standing
side
by
side
with
you
to
figure
out
how
to
help
you
with
this
recovery.