High risk areas. Priorities.
Anarchistbear said:
There is no problem on a macro level- enough water to drown all these fires.
The problem is partly engineering calculations for peak load and largely maintenance and adaptation of infrastructure for current number of people and needs.
Governments don't like spending money for " maintenance". They prefer to spend money on big capital projects with a constituent payback. Same, no matter who is in charge
Wow the LA Mayor’s fire scandal gets worse
— DC_Draino (@DC_Draino) January 10, 2025
We all know she cut $17.5 million from the fire department budget, but now a leaked memo shows she wanted to cut nearly *triple* that amount
Over $49 million!!
Karen Bass needs to resign NOW pic.twitter.com/qemnQwJX1e
Newsom has now requested an investigation into why the fire hydrants were dry
— DC_Draino (@DC_Draino) January 10, 2025
This comes on the same day that LAFD DEI Chief said she blamed Mayor Karen Bass for not enough budget $
You better believe Karen Bass will point the fingers right back
It’s a circular firing squad of… pic.twitter.com/pMWlVhYmlo
YouTubers document arsonists across LApic.twitter.com/uwXAqXFdxR
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) January 10, 2025
BearGoggles said:
Why are you dissembling and being so abrasive about it?
People are saying "we should have more than 2 CL-415 planes" and your responding with: (i) we have 2; and (ii) California has a lot of other types of planes and helicopters that fight fires.
The assertion is that we should have more of a specific thing that is particularly effective in fighting fires - CL-415 planes. Fine to dispute that - but your arguments are not even addressing that point.
It is almost like you just want to call people names and tell them they're stupid (which boomerangs right back at you).
California has a history of such fires. Solutions will be a little about local water storage and hydrant systems, probably more about land use and building codes to protect from embers.
— Jay Lund (@JayLund113) January 10, 2025
Current LA fires have amazing low death tolls! Good job with warnings & evacuations. pic.twitter.com/Xup0gMf6Tf
For those wondering how long the Santa Ynez Reservoir has been empty the answer is June 2009. Go to Google Earth and locate Santa Ynez. There's a slider top left allowing you to scroll through historic satellite imagery which I marked with a yellow rectangle. pic.twitter.com/TjD29jqpNf
— wretchardthecat (@wretchardthecat) January 10, 2025
You should have stopped there. But we all know throwing everything against the wall and seeing what sticks is how things work today.movielover said:
Possibly some new information.
🚨 Biden mocks complaints that fire hydrants in LA didn’t have enough water, complains about “demagogues."
— Western Lensman (@WesternLensman) January 10, 2025
"I know you're getting a bad rap about these fire hydrants don't have enough water in them. Give me a break."
"You're going to have a lot of demagogues out there trying to… pic.twitter.com/cocU4lfWsB
bear2034 said:movielover said:
8. Pacific Palisades 117-million-gallon reservoir was offline and empty for cosmetic repairs.
"Officials told The Times that the Santa Ynez Reservoir had been closed for repairs to its cover, leaving a 117 million gallon water storage complex empty in the heart of the Palisades."
This high reservoir feeds smaller tanks and lines below it.
Officials argue it wouldn't be full; but why not fill it 100% before a peak fire period?
https://www.yahoo.com/news/pacific-palisades-reservoir-offline-empty-163924460.htmlJUST IN: Los Angeles Fire Department chief Kristin Crowley turns on Los Angeles leadership, says they failed her.
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) January 10, 2025
Remarkable interview.
Crowley called out the city for having no water in the Santa Ynez Reservoir.
Reporter: "Did the city of Los Angeles fail you and your… pic.twitter.com/fUQPoW32QA
Big C said:
I bet a practical state like Texas, with their no-nonsense, non-woke leadership, has a handle on most all natural disasters.
sycasey said:Big C said:
I bet a practical state like Texas, with their no-nonsense, non-woke leadership, has a handle on most all natural disasters.
Indeed, no recent issues I can think of.
Cal88 said:
It actually looks a bit better when you zoom in, because the smaller/less intense orange lights in that picture look like normal lighting and not fire. It also shows however that there are some isolated houses catching fire, likely from embers jumping rows of houses.
sycasey said:movielover said:bearister said:
"The lack of sufficient water to put out the fires wasn't as simple as a few bone-headed decisions by incompetent people. It's exceptionally complex: Municipal water systems aren't built for this many fires requiring this much water from this many hydrants. Fixing this, if super-fires are indeed a new normal, would be a domestic Manhattan Project."
-Axios
FALSE.
1. Allow First Responders to use diesel, natural gas, etc., to run generators, in emergencies. These generators could have refilled local reservoirs, water tanks, and pressurized lines. (See above post.)
2. Buying a fleet of massive water tanker planes for the southwestern United States is common sense. Or make it the whole west coast. A dozen or more.
3. Having fire crews check fire hydrants daily is simple and common sense. You don't need extra crew to do this, unless union rules are a problem.
4. Cutting fire breaks and having controlled burns in early spring or late fall is common sense. Brush removal is common sense. Having fire trails is common sense (the Sierra Club sued to remove them).
5. Having fire mitigation and preparation be more important than DEI policies is critical.
6. A lawless society with substantial populations of drug users (aka homeless), Anarchists, and cartel members is ripe for problems.
7. It's interesting this happened right after the election of President Trump. This isn't the first time Los Angeles has had strong winds.
If this stuff is indeed "common sense" and critical public service, then I'll bet dollars to donuts that local conservatives have argued against paying for much of it with their tax dollars (aside from law enforcement, which they always want to pay for).
Quote:
In the United States, personal debt excluding mortgages totals a significant amount. On average, Americans carry about $22,713 per person in non-mortgage debt. This includes credit card balances (28% of the total) and auto loans (13%), as well as student loans and personal loans [oai_citation:1,Average Personal Debt Owed by Americans Now | Money](https://money.com/average-american-personal-debt-amount/) [oai_citation:2,Average Non-Mortgage Debt Falls to Lowest Number Since 2019 Why It's Both Good and Bad News for Americans | Nasdaq](https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/average-non-mortgage-debt-falls-to-lowest-number-since-2019-why-its-both-good-and-bad-news).
When scaled to the U.S. population, the total non-mortgage debt amounts to over **$6.2 trillion**, with a large portion stemming from consumer credit and other personal loans [oai_citation:3,Experian Study: Average U.S. Consumer Debt and Statistics - Experian](https://www.experian.com/blogs/ask-experian/research/consumer-debt-study/). While this is lower than the federal government's $35 trillion debt, it reflects a substantial financial burden on individual households.
movielover said:
Cal88 has spelled out the massive advantages of the Bombardier 415 Superscooper - CL-215 / 415 water bombers - that sound 8x or 10x as efficient as fixed wing, often smaller planes.
Canada has them, France has them, we loan them out.
I understand this was fine in most situations, but since many fire professionals knew this day was coming, why not prepare and be proactive?
Ballpark price - $35 - 40 Million each
I know exactly what Cal88 does and how he posts a lot of crap and questionable links. But even a broken clock is right twice a day. In this case, he has a reasonable point/argument and you're now acknowledging . You don't deny the planes are useful. In fact most news reports are pointing out the unique value of the CL-415s. Its fair to ask why we don't have more. So why attack him with ad hominin?DiabloWags said:BearGoggles said:
Why are you dissembling and being so abrasive about it?
People are saying "we should have more than 2 CL-415 planes" and your responding with: (i) we have 2; and (ii) California has a lot of other types of planes and helicopters that fight fires.
The assertion is that we should have more of a specific thing that is particularly effective in fighting fires - CL-415 planes. Fine to dispute that - but your arguments are not even addressing that point.
It is almost like you just want to call people names and tell them they're stupid (which boomerangs right back at you).
Because he's unable to think for himself and does nothing but "parrot" the lies of Alex Jones, Elon Musk, and the rest of the Trumper universe. He literally spends his days here CUT AND PASTING the same talking points, or have you not noticed that?
I don't deny that these planes can be useful.
But I also realize that CAL FIRE probably has its own reasons why they only have 2 CL-415s at their disposal.
And I also realize that 3,000 gallons in a water drop or also having the capability of using fire ******ant is a lot more than 1,620.
But you apparently find no fault with the rest of his anti-California narrative by repeatedly POLITICIZING this tragedy.
He doesn't give a rats ass about California.
He just wants to use it to own the libs.
The fact that you ignore this speaks volumes.
You wear the "goggles".
Not me.
SHOCK: DEI Mayor fires DEI fire chief after the lesbian fire chief blew the whistle in the corrupt mayor. Will Mayor Bass resign now? pic.twitter.com/i0iZb05bgc
— @amuse (@amuse) January 11, 2025
BearGoggles said:
Stating that liberal policies (and incompetence by a complacent liberal dominated California government) exacerbated the fire is a fair opinion. Yes - its political.
DiabloWags said:sycasey said:Big C said:
I bet a practical state like Texas, with their no-nonsense, non-woke leadership, has a handle on most all natural disasters.
Indeed, no recent issues I can think of.
Nope.
Its not like the power ever went out with all that oil and gas during an ice storm and 244 people died.
Must have been fake news.
sycasey said:BearGoggles said:
Stating that liberal policies (and incompetence by a complacent liberal dominated California government) exacerbated the fire is a fair opinion. Yes - its political.
To me the "liberal policies" argument loses steam when it becomes about how the government should have spent more money on X thing. Typically conservatives are against that, and to bring it up now smells of convenience.
bear2034 said:sycasey said:BearGoggles said:
Stating that liberal policies (and incompetence by a complacent liberal dominated California government) exacerbated the fire is a fair opinion. Yes - its political.
To me the "liberal policies" argument loses steam when it becomes about how the government should have spent more money on X thing. Typically conservatives are against that, and to bring it up now smells of convenience.
There are always tradeoffs. What did the government spend on and what did they cut? It's hard to blame conservatives in a state and city overwhelmingly run by Democrats.
sycasey said:bear2034 said:sycasey said:BearGoggles said:
Stating that liberal policies (and incompetence by a complacent liberal dominated California government) exacerbated the fire is a fair opinion. Yes - its political.
To me the "liberal policies" argument loses steam when it becomes about how the government should have spent more money on X thing. Typically conservatives are against that, and to bring it up now smells of convenience.
There are always tradeoffs. What did the government spend on and what did they cut? It's hard to blame conservatives in a state and city overwhelmingly run by Democrats.
In this specific case yes. But when natural disasters hit in Republican-run states the same people aren't going on and on about blaming the local politicians. Excuse me if I'm skeptical of your motives.
We need to demand the immediate resignations of Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass. pic.twitter.com/2NTRl579eE
— Jack Hibbs (@RealJackHibbs) January 11, 2025
DEI: Janisse Quiñones, LA’s Water Czar is paid $750K/yr and says her primary focus is equity, not water. She covered up the fact that she shut down Santa Ynez Reservoir for repairs and THAT was the reason there was no water to fight the wildfire.
— @amuse (@amuse) January 11, 2025
h/t @CollinRugg pic.twitter.com/fuHhqhsuLQ
BREAKING NOW - A LOS ANGELES COUNTY OFFICIAL has stated that there have been nearly 300 fires set intentionally by acts of arson and or terrorism in and throughout the city by either homeless individuals and or organized arsonists.
— Jack Hibbs (@RealJackHibbs) January 10, 2025
Los Angeles is under attack by those with a…
movielover said:We need to demand the immediate resignations of Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass. pic.twitter.com/2NTRl579eE
— Jack Hibbs (@RealJackHibbs) January 11, 2025