Ryan was always willing to help, offering his time and expertise through activities such as volunteering to prepare communities for wildfire. After certifying his own home and 36 others in the Galeppi Firewise community in 2018, he helped create the Quincy Firewise community in 2020, certifying 2,400 residences and introducing an interactive online Firewise reporting tool to allow volunteers to register home hardening, fuel reduction and wildfire preparedness efforts. The tool is now recognized nationally.
From 2020-2021, Ryan worked with the Feather River Resource Conservation District (RCD) to monitor long-term ecological conditions following post-fire treatments. He also helped pilot an emergency forest restoration team that led to the restoration of more than 2,000 acres of forestland across more than 200 properties in Plumas County.
In 2022, Ryan co-authored the paper “Operational Resilience in Western U.S. Frequent-Fire Forests,” which became a guiding document for USFS and local RCD forest health projects, including the Claremont and North Quincy Projects. Following the occurrence of catastrophic wildfires like the Dixie and North Complex, as well as others, he worked with small and large private landowners to obtain grants to help reforest their lands and helped prepared them for the follow-up investments in vegetative treatments that ensure successful reforestation.
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