Comment on the LA Times, "Deadly California fires prompt bold thinking about prevention: Shelters, strict zoning, buyouts"
The answer isn't one thing, but rather all of the above, and the article does a pretty good job of highlighting actions that the state could take: Suggesting we rethink and update our approach to urban planning and fire-hardening of structures as well as location and siting of structures. There are plenty of contributors that don't receive mention: There's the now well-known idea that we are grappling with a legacy of lands management that have made our forests susceptible to recurring high-intensity fires. Also not mentioned are invasive grasses that contribute to fuel loading and spread of fire. Nor is air pollution noted, which can increase the growth of invasive and fire-prone plant species through dry-fall of nitrogen-containing pollutants from the air. But those aren't really the point of the article, either.
What we can address is local (state wide) standards. The recurring cost of lives and property lost that is otherwise avoidable will make such an effort worth while, despite higher up-front costs. We shouldn't just rebuild without thought. After all, isnt't a definition of insanity doing the same thing again and again while expecting a different outcome?
However, as the article notes, state flow-down of minimum standards for emergency egress, materials, design, and land use is bound to come up against fierce opposition from local planning advocates. That's a natural reaction, but the smarter thing to do is to change our approach in the face of new information.
We need to provide more housing. Land is expensive in the cities so houses are multi-story and have stairs. I've known so many people who have retired and moved to the WUI in order to afford a SFH without stairs.
ReplyDeleteWe cannot afford to keep doing that. We need to make housing inside the cities without stairs and in places where one can live without driving. Multi-unit denser housing will solve so many urban planning, affordability and aging problems as well as slow climate change, but NIMBYs.
Agree. This is yet another pressure on the system that should be addressed.
DeleteSystems engineers should easily recognize the coupled nature of the solution that we need, but for those without a systems approach it can easily devolve to pointing the finger elsewhere when part of the solution affects you.