Well, I don't have a lot of faith in any government and I left Calif 15 years ago. my first house was in Northridge (a little rancher) and I was there for the 94 quake, and actually found the gov't response to be rather competent, and they subsequently required changes to the building code to mitigate damages when the next big one happens. I got lucky with that house, because my then USAA quake insurance covered most of the damage.
But as time went on, while taxes rose steadily, services & competency declined - it was noticeable if one was looking. our needs changed with a family (schools/safety). We eventually left, as I did not see much of an ROI on the taxes. btw, i don't mind taxes if I believe the policies are generally sound and officials quasi-competent. For example, the place we moved to next had huge property tax rates (huge) but I did not think much of it, as wow did we have excellent infrastructure.
So i disagree that "stuff happens", and I think I'm entitled to a view since my property in Altadena burned down. This is a failure to learn lessons of the past, a failure to invest in infrastructure, a failure to enforce code that mitigates damages. and maybe that means a whole lot more in taxes, or the realization that structures are forbidden in certain areas. Certainly, market forces through pricing and availability of property insurance will address some of this, and no doubt politicans will scream about corporate greed...but...news flash - insurance companies just use statistics and actuarial tables.
I understand everything you've said up to this point. And a lot of Californians feel the way you do.
But, what infrastructure and what code enforcement stops 80 mile per hour winds from blowing flames?
I'm not going to blame a party or person, would be pointless. Any reasonable person can just drive around LA County and see that lack of capital investment. What is ironic is politicians talk lot about climate change, and so we should conclude they believe it to be a clear and present danger - my question of the elected officials - ok, we accept climate change
Accepting climate change is part of the problem. Simultaneous to mitigation of effects (and again, what have you got for fire and 80 mile per hour winds?), we need to be actively reducing our contribution. And that's where party politics comes in:
The Democrats in California do this:
Following Governor Newsom’s call for more ambitious climate action, state’s climate plan would create 4 million new jobs, slash greenhouse gas emissions by 85%, and cut oil usage by 94%
www.gov.ca.gov
The Republicans in Washington do this:
The Biden administration approved California's authority to enforce stricter vehicle emissions standards, just before Donald Trump takes office vowing to reverse the decision. Alex Nieves and Debra Kahn report for POLITICO. In short: The EPA granted California permission to enforce...
www.dailyclimate.org
California moves to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and the three California University systems move to be carbon zero by 2045 and it's derided as "The Green New Scam".
- but what policies and investments have you made to address adverse impacts that will therefore accrue to LA County (more fires, less water, whatever) and the answer is not much.
Seriously?
Are they virtue signaling
The opposite of virtue signaling would be "vice signaling". Is that what conservatives do when they vote against wildfire prevention funding and carbon emissions reductions?
"Virtue signaling" is such a horseshit term. Someone accused me of virtue signaling during the pandemic because I wore a mask. They shut right up when I said that my wearing a mask to protect someone else's health was no more virtue signaling than them washing their hands before making someone else a sandwich.
I said I'd be happy to discuss it further over lunch, but only if I got to pick the restaurant.
, or are they fearful to deliver the hard news about the cost to address this stuff?
I'm sorry---you
left because California was raising taxes all the time, right?
My sense is that the true cost of living in LA County should be a lot higher than we have been paying. But without a substantive tax base (which is declining) we will continue the slow death spiral - unless somehow the Feds will fund most of the deferred maintenance and the new things we need to address adversity from climate change.
And again, the odds of that in the next four years are?
I mean, $310 billion for high speed rail is cool, but maybe we have higher priorities.
The cost overruns on high-speed rail are indefensible. Should have been finished years ago.
In summary, fires happen and damage will be experienced - but through my observations and instinct, I also believe had competent officials made reasonable decisions over the prior 20 years, some of which would have been super unpopular and costly, the damage from these particular fires would have been less.
And again, skip super unpopular and costly (and never mind that the opposition party would exploit that to the point that people would demand those measures be abandoned like....well, like high-speed rail.
Whaddya got for fire blowing through the air in 80 mph winds? What do you think anyone else has, even if they had Elon Musk money?
Just an opinion though...
Exactly.