The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors has approved more than $3.7 million in grants to fund 20 vegetation management projects that promise to help reduce fire risk.

The funds will come from the PG&E settlement awarded to the county as a result of the 2017 Sonoma Complex Fires lawsuit. In 2020, the board voted to allocate $25 million of the $149 million settlement toward vegetation management activities.

Board chair Lynda Hopkins said the programs will help landowners and communities clear critical access roads, create defensible space around structures, form much-needed shaded fuel breaks and educate the community on wildfire safety and reducing fire risks.

County official said the 20 programs were selected from among 89 applicants totaling more than $16 million in requested funds.

The projects funded with their respective amounts are:

• Alert Sonoma County $122,000

• Cavedale-Trinity $250,000

• Coast Ridge $423,000

• Fire Safe Sonoma WFAP $37,100

• Foothills POA $20,904

• Good Fire Revival $145,000

• Gualala Ranch HOA $77,000

• Jenner Headlands Preserve $165,000

• Kashia Band of Pomo Indians $120,936

• Landsmart Community Grazing $184,600

• Mill Creek Post Fire Shaded Fuel Breaks $300,000

• Moonraker Firetower Perimeter $26,460

• North Bay Forest Improvement Program $163,381

• Northern Sonoma County JPA $504,700

• Resilient Landscapes Coalition $110,317

• Sonoma Valley Fire District $93,379

• Sweetwater-Mt. Jackson $227,050

• Timber Cove Community Chipping Project $129,012

• Upper Mark West $515,861

• Wilshire Crystal Heights $106,460