“…The Santa Ana winds (SAWs; Guzman‐Morales et al, ; Hughes & Hall, ; Raphael, ), rooted in cold air masses over the elevated Great Basin, are notorious for fanning California's largest wildfires. SAW‐fanned wildfires typically rage in the sloping coastal backcountry, with its encroaching wildland‐urban‐interface (WUI), where the gusty downslope SAWs are strongest (Guzman‐Morales et al, ; Moritz et al, ) and ignitions are nearly always human caused (Kolden & Abatzoglou, ; Syphard & Keeley, ). While the local impacts of these wildfires are devastating (e.g., Medina, ), smoke blowing toward the densely populated coastal zone exposes much larger and diverse populations to remote respiratory health impacts (Delfino et al, ).…”