(01-12-2025, 09:08 PM)IdeomotorPrisoner Wrote: If only everyone could afford private firefighters to focus solely on their property and nothing else.
I'm sure if the LAFD had a ratio of one committed team for every property; schools, churches, libraries, and the lot could have all been saved.
But that's exactly what's needed to save a property. A committed team with unlimited water to focus solely on that one property. Even 500 firefighters protecting 500 houses with all the water they can use isn't enough.
Still says more about the violence of the fire to me.
I think the fire chief is so adamant because she is right (about the underfunding), but also using it to make sure no FD heads roll in the obligatory aftermath.
Just discussing this IP with no hostile intent, Im not jockeying for a position to pile on.
It was a couple of water tankers with hoses spraying down the perimeter and other areas, probably cost 50 grand max and saved how many businesses and jobs...
https://x.com/Brian_Kennedy/status/1878606490401149328
but forget that let's extrapolate from your premise that these fires are an act of nature, and LA's geography and weather plus our reliance on fossil fuels make living in most of Cali a dangerous and losing proposition.
After all, Congressperson O'Casio Cortez stated unequivocally we were 12 years from irreversible damage 5 years ago ie conditions would get worse and worse, with more fires longer fires, earlier fire season, etc. Then
Maybe they shouldn't rebuild in such dangerous and expensive areas. The human cost alone, added to the financial cost, will bankrupt some insurance companies, which could also seriously hinder the economy.
This is all so LA can rebuild and have the Santa Ana winds help start conflagration after conflagration every time it's too dry, especially with another La Niña on the horizon.
FWIW there are 8 Cali wildfires listed in the US's top natural disasters, every one of them occurred 2006 or later. Sure we have more Hurricanes but they hit in a much broader area and it's mostly much less expensive areas to rebuild.
Tampa could go another 80 years without getting hit, but we know damn sure know the greater Los Angeles area could easily have fires every few years