youbet
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
To whatever extent our gov't covers the cost of losses, the land should become public property and not be rebuilt on.I wonder if FEMA will cover any of this.
To whatever extent our gov't covers the cost of losses, the land should become public property and not be rebuilt on.I wonder if FEMA will cover any of this.
Big difference from Maui - resources! Yes, it's bad in California no doubt. But they have a lot more resources to recover relatively quickly.This sounds so similar to the Lahaina Maui wild fires that it gives me the willies. Loss of life was something over 100. Praying for the residents of California. I hope all our members are safe.
They way it worked out around here after the flooding..... You think you could come take my property for $750.... Some folks would get shot.To whatever extent our gov't covers the cost of losses, the land should become public property and not be rebuilt on.
+1. I for one, despise overpaid celebrities, especially actors and actresses. They are no better than the regular Joes but they either have connections and got lucky, and all of a sudden they think that they are gods because of the insane amount of money that they make. I don't feel sorry for the overpaid self-entitled celebrities who lost their homes but my heart goes out to the fire fighters and the ordinary folks who lost their homes.I'm sorry for them. But they are no different than the other regular people that have lost their homes and/or livelihood:
Plumber Pete, Accountant Angie, Mechanic Mike, Janitor Joe, Housecleaner Helen, Salesperson Sally, Policeman Paul, Roofer Ron, Engineer Eve, Scientist Sam, Electrician Eddie, Chef Charlie, Waitress Wendy, Busdriver Bob, ...........
You get the point. All these people need our prayers and help for recovery. I just don't get celebrity being any more special than the regular folks. I'll leave rest of my opinion off my reply.
To add to this, I lived there for a good bit and 100 MPH Santa Ana winds are very untypical.Remember that almost half of California is Federal land. So if you think there's not enough forest management being done, please contact your Congress critters and advocate for budget increases for agencies like the BLM, USFS and NPS to make that happen.
People should also understand that there's a lot of wilderness in and very close to the edges of major cities in California and that our wilderness areas are more prone to fire than the wilderness in some other parts of the country. The natural geography in a lot of this area consists of mesas and canyons, and the Santa Anas have been pushing fires through them for eons. The Native Americans who were here first described this phenomenon, and there's a story about the early Spanish explorers calling what's now L.A. the Bay of Smoke.
Fire is a fact of life in the west and wildfire disasters have happened in most western states in recent memory -- Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, and so on, even Canada. This fire is just in a more populous urban area than most of them have been. The wildland-urban interface is under more pressure here than in most other places due to the massive population growth in the last century. Despite what you might have read about people fleeing California during the pandemic, there still isn't enough housing and the population is now growing again, so we keep building both upward and outward in our cities, and that increases fire risk in and near wildland areas and affects water supply and availability. It's very hard, if not impossible, to do controlled burns and some of the other actions people have mentioned in the middle of urban areas.
And sure, Federal, state and local governments could always do more to tame mother nature. It's pretty hard to stop the wind from blowing, but defensible space is required everywhere, maybe that needs to be bigger. But then, how much space is enough when the wind is blowing at the speed of a hurricane? Many of you understand from personal experience how far the wind can carry debris. What you're seeing on TV is what happens when that windblown debris is on fire and the humidity is at 14%. We're supposedly in a one-in-hundred-years event here. I don't know what the fix is since we can't seem to stop climate change, but it does seem like there are a lot more of these once-per-century events happening everywhere.
Sorry, this got to be longer than I intended when I started this post. Thanks to anyone who read all my ramblings to the end.
+1. I for one, despise overpaid celebrities, especially actors and actresses. They are no better than the regular Joes but they either have connections and got lucky, and all of a sudden they think that they are gods because of the insane amount of money that they make. I don't feel sorry for the overpaid self-entitled celebrities who lost their homes but my heart goes out to the fire fighters and the ordinary folks who lost their homes.
.... Hardly a word of this on the news.
Remember that almost half of California is Federal land. So if you think there's not enough forest management being done, please contact your Congress critters and advocate for budget increases for agencies like the BLM, USFS and NPS to make that happen.
People should also understand that there's a lot of wilderness in and very close to the edges of major cities in California and that our wilderness areas are more prone to fire than the wilderness in some other parts of the country. The natural geography in a lot of this area consists of mesas and canyons, and the Santa Anas have been pushing fires through them for eons. The Native Americans who were here first described this phenomenon, and there's a story about the early Spanish explorers calling what's now L.A. the Bay of Smoke.
Fire is a fact of life in the west and wildfire disasters have happened in most western states in recent memory -- Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, and so on, even Canada. This fire is just in a more populous urban area than most of them have been. The wildland-urban interface is under more pressure here than in most other places due to the massive population growth in the last century. Despite what you might have read about people fleeing California during the pandemic, there still isn't enough housing and the population is now growing again, so we keep building both upward and outward in our cities, and that increases fire risk in and near wildland areas and affects water supply and availability. It's very hard, if not impossible, to do controlled burns and some of the other actions people have mentioned in the middle of urban areas.
And sure, Federal, state and local governments could always do more to tame mother nature. It's pretty hard to stop the wind from blowing, but defensible space is required everywhere, maybe that needs to be bigger. But then, how much space is enough when the wind is blowing at the speed of a hurricane? Many of you understand from personal experience how far the wind can carry debris. What you're seeing on TV is what happens when that windblown debris is on fire and the humidity is at 14%. We're supposedly in a one-in-hundred-years event here. I don't know what the fix is since we can't seem to stop climate change, but it does seem like there are a lot more of these once-per-century events happening everywhere.
Sorry, this got to be longer than I intended when I started this post. Thanks to anyone who read all my ramblings to the end.
It turns out that they had incorrect information. They went back and the house is still standing!! The block across the street is all burned but their side of the street survived.This morning I contacted my sister about her step daughter and her family who live in Altadena, CA. She told me they had evacuated and were staying with friends.
This afternoon their house burned down. It was a house they had been renting for a few years. Just tragic. But they are safe.
It's always easier to blame the climate than incompetence. It's a get out of jail free card. Therefore, it's far more likely that 1 in 20 year occurrences will be called 1 in 100 or 1 in 1000.We're supposedly in a one-in-hundred-years event here. I don't know what the fix is since we can't seem to stop climate change, but it does seem like there are a lot more of these once-per-century events happening everywhere.
The "one-in-hundred-years" nomenclature doesn't mean the event is expected to occur once every hundred years. It means the estimated probability of occurrence each year is 1%. This compounds over subsequent years.We're supposedly in a one-in-hundred-years event here.
By way of non-political assessment, much of California is achingly beautiful, but not ideally suited to dense habitation by humans. Expensive land means dense building, even it's single family houses. The very same topography that makes it so beautiful, renders it hard to provide services, especially in emergencies. It exacerbates natural risks, like windswept flames accelerating through canyons. And it tends to turn small mishaps into major disasters.Since you are a Californian, perhaps you can enlighten me on why the people of California continue to "hire" "incompetent leaders"?
I realize that natural disasters can happen (I am in Florida and deal with Hurricanes regularly) but seems like cutting the fire department funding, closing reservoirs, inadequate forestry management & not having operating fire hydrants would not be a good strategy for a windy, dry, mountainous, forested areas prone to forest fires?
I cant imagine that being a likely scenario in a place like LA County. Municipal water systems here in flyover country are backed with diesel generators, both at the treatment plant and key booster stations. That's simple disaster preparedness. The more likely scenario is there was just too much demand from the firefighting activities. The system can't keep up. Or perhaps the water plants or booster pump stations themselves were consumed by fire.Biden addressed the reason why so many fire hydrants went dry, hampering firefighting efforts. He said it was because the power had been shut off, depriving the pumps needed to pump the water to the hydrants. Interesting . . .