The Fire Adapted New Mexico Learning Network (FAC NM) is about fostering fire adapted communities - communities that acknowledge and take responsibility for their wildfire risk, and take actions to protect residents, homes, neighborhoods, businesses, infrastructure, forests, and open spaces.

Whether you are a seasoned wildland fire fighter, forester, or resident living in the wildland urban interface (WUI), there is a place for you in the FAC NM; a statewide network of people willing to take collective action to increase wildfire resilience. FAC NM is a place to share resources, successes, failures, and lessons learned. 

Network Vision

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More important than answering the question "what can you do" to reduce wildfire risk, is "what can we do?" Our collective action, as residents of a fire adapted ecosystem, has the ability to have an outsized impact compared with what single actor can achieve. There is a lot of experience and knowledge in our formal and informal networks. Technology provides us a way to formalize those connections and make sharing resources and capacity easier.

At it's core, the FAC NM Learning Network is a grassroots, member driven effort. FAC NM members feel empowered to take action to reduce wildfire risk to their homes and communities. Members recognize that fire has a role to play in the fire adapted ecosystems in which we live.  

A community is never done with building wildfire resilience - there is no end-point. A Fire Adapted Community consists of informed and prepared citizens collaboratively planning and taking action to safely coexist with wildland fire.  

Our vision is to have:

  • Residents build the concept of defensible space into their decisions,

  • Residents support one another and their communities to build fire adapted communities

  • Communities integrate wildland fire into land-use planning and infrastructure decisions,

  • Civic institutions collaborate to be prepared for wildfire,

  • Architects, planners, landscapers, and developers integrate realities of fire risk into their work flow,

  • Communities support land managers in their efforts to restore fire-adapted ecosystems.

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