Neighborhood Teams are blossoming from our community’s lived experience with wildfire and the understanding that safety here depends on both personal responsibility and looking out for one another. These volunteer teams keep neighbors connected through everyday attention and care, especially for those facing barriers to safety or recovery. In a rural area where a single house fire can quickly threaten nearby homes, teams support defensible space and hazard reduction for residents unable to do this work alone and provide check-ins during extreme heat, smoke events, or evacuations. Over time, this builds local capacity so mitigation becomes part of daily life, not only a response to crisis. The program brings structure through coordinated mitigation, shared training, clear communication, and OSFM-supported equipment.

We are expanding this work because the community has reached a turning point. After watching contractor-led mitigation, many residents have gravitated toward a more neighbor-led approach that fits the valley’s independent culture. The growing number of volunteer-mitigated homes and increased participation reflect acceptance of the Neighborhood Teams model. Monthly meetings draw 20 to 30 engaged residents, and mitigation work days bring together 4 to 25 volunteers to clear debris, remove blackberries, and reduce fire fuels around homes. As more residents request assistance, the pilot is proving effective, and full implementation will continue strengthening safety across the Row River Valley.

Subcommittees have been created to support key areas:

  • Communications: Development of reliable, community-based communication systems in the absence of mobile coverage, including exploration of Ham radio and walkie-talkie options.
  • Neighborhood Support: Formation of neighborhood-level teams to identify and assist residents facing barriers, including injury, disability, or aging-related needs.
  • Food Needs: Identification of households experiencing food insecurity, with emphasis on undernourished children, and coordination of community-based support to improve consistent access to nutritious food.
  • Be Two Weeks Ready: Delivery of disaster preparedness training, in coordination with Oregon Emergency Management, to improve household readiness and resilience.

Learn More about Neighborhood Teams

How To Get Involved

We would love to know more about you!
A community vision includes your voice!

What special skills or interests can you bring to the group?

The Row River Review is our own little newspaper. We send this out directly to your mailbox!

In it you will find news about our Neighborhood Team Events, RRVCPs Defensible Space funding programs, along with local history, special events from the Row River Grange and Sunshine Club, newsy bits and more.

Issues are available online, but we would love to put them right into your hands. Please let us know if you live in the Row River Valley and have not received them, or if you are from out of the area we will be happy to send them to you! For any inquiries, email: Communications@RowRiverValley.org

The Row River Review