FIRE SEASON GUIDE — CONEJO VALLEY HOMEOWNERS
Fire Season Readiness and Your Garage Door in Thousand Oaks
Fire season in Thousand Oaks runs October through May — and every year, PSPS power shutoffs and Red Flag conditions test whether your garage door system is ready. This guide covers what Conejo Valley homeowners need to check before fire season to make sure their garage door is not the thing that traps them during an evacuation.
Why Your Garage Door Is a Fire Season Priority in Thousand Oaks
During the Woolsey Fire in November 2018, dozens of Thousand Oaks and Ventura County homeowners reported being unable to open their garage doors during evacuation because Southern California Edison had already initiated PSPS. A garage door without battery backup and no manual release cord is a sealed barrier when power is out. In many homes, vehicles are parked in the garage — a trapped vehicle during an evacuation is a life-safety issue. The garage door is typically the largest opening in the home and the primary vehicle exit. Making sure it works without power is not a convenience issue in the Conejo Valley — it is a fire season safety requirement.
Battery Backup Openers and Power Shutoffs in the Conejo Valley
California AB 2280, effective July 1, 2019, requires battery backup on all new garage door opener installations. The law was a direct response to the 2018 PSPS and fire events. A properly functioning battery backup unit allows approximately 50 open-close cycles after grid power is lost — enough for an evacuation and return. The battery backup unit must be tested before fire season. The test is simple: disconnect the opener from the outlet and operate the door using the wall button or remote. If the door operates normally, the backup is functional. If the door does not move, the backup battery is dead or missing. Call (805) 870-9633 — we verify and replace battery backup units same-day.
Garage Door Materials and Fire Resistance Ratings
Not all garage doors offer the same protection against radiant heat and ember intrusion. Steel doors with polyurethane insulation core provide the best fire resistance for standard residential garage doors. Insulated steel significantly outperforms uninsulated steel because the foam core slows heat transfer through the panel. Wood and wood composite doors can ignite from ember exposure — homes in the WUI (Wildland-Urban Interface) zone along the Santa Monica Mountains edge should prioritize steel. The California State Fire Marshal publishes a list of approved fire-rated garage door assemblies for homes subject to local ordinance requirements. Check your Ventura County Fire Department requirements if your home backs up to open space.
Pre-Fire Season Inspection Checklist for Thousand Oaks Homeowners
- Test battery backup — disconnect power to the opener and operate the door; it must move normally
- Locate and test the manual release cord — the red cord hanging from the opener rail; pull it to disconnect the door from the drive; verify you can lift the door manually
- Inspect torsion springs for visible gap, rust, or corrosion — a failing spring makes manual release difficult
- Check that the door seals fully when closed — gaps at the bottom seal allow ember intrusion
- Clear any combustible materials stored against the garage door interior
- Verify the door operates smoothly through a full cycle — any sticking, reversing, or grinding means something needs service
- Call (805) 870-9633 if any of the above checks reveal a problem
What to Do If Your Garage Door Fails During Evacuation
If your garage door does not respond during a power outage or PSPS event: pull the red manual release cord hanging from the opener rail. This disconnects the door from the motorized drive. You can now lift the door manually. A door with a functional torsion spring and properly adjusted cable tension should lift with one hand from the bottom center. If the door is extremely heavy, the spring may be broken — get low leverage from the bottom corners and push up. Once the door is open and your vehicle is out, do not re-close the door unless you can re-engage the opener later. Leave it open for emergency personnel access. Call (805) 870-9633 as soon as the evacuation is over.
FAQ — Fire Season and Garage Doors in Thousand Oaks
Get your Thousand Oaks garage door ready for fire season
Call (805) 870-9633 — Pre-Season Inspection Before October
Battery backup test, spring inspection, manual release verification. Same-day service across Thousand Oaks. Written estimate before any work starts.