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California Wildfires running thread

The Pacific Palisades fire occurred within the city limits of Los Angeles so the first responder is Los Angles City Fire. I have read that about 10,000 structures have been lost. The fire chief of Los Angeles City Fire is a gay woman. I know this because I have read criticisms of DEI hiring and how it leads to ruination in times of crisis such as this.

I watched 60 Minutes and they interviewed the Fire Chief of Los Angeles County, a light skinned male named Anthony Marrone, about the Eaton fire, This fire destroyed 7,000-8,000 structures and occurred in unincorporated Los Angeles County. I have heard no criticism of the hiring practices of Les Angeles County so I guess the fact that a couple of thousand less structures were lost in the Eaton fire is the result of hiring a white male.
 

The Mann Gulch fire killed 13 Forest Service firefighters in 1949. That was for many years the worst loss of life of firefighters in Forest Service history. A book about the fire, Young Men and a Fire, is am absolute masterpiece. It was written by Norman MacLean, who also wrote A River Runs Through it.
 
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The Pacific Palisades fire occurred within the city limits of Los Angeles so the first responder is Los Angles City Fire. I have read that about 10,000 structures have been lost. The fire chief of Los Angeles City Fire is a gay woman. I know this because I have read criticisms of DEI hiring and how it leads to ruination in times of crisis such as this.

I watched 60 Minutes and they interviewed the Fire Chief of Los Angeles County, a light skinned male named Anthony Marrone, about the Eaton fire, This fire destroyed 7,000-8,000 structures and occurred in unincorporated Los Angeles County. I have heard no criticism of the hiring practices of Les Angeles County so I guess the fact that a couple of thousand less structures were lost in the Eaton fire is the result of hiring a white male.
What if the real problem is the lack of staffing in general?

'Beyond the brink': data shows LA Fire Department among the most understaffed in America — CNN
 
I wouldn't be surprised if we discover one of the main reasons LAFD is chronically understaffed is because its rank and file wants to keep it that way. Overtime pay for firefighters is astronomical.
 

It might be, But I think the extra staff would have had to extinguish the fire very early in the process. Once the embers start flying in the wind any department is going to be overwhelmed.

Los Angeles Country suffered from a wet winter followed by essentially no rain until now. The Santa Anna winds came up and started transporting the embers over the firefighters heads. /

Los Angeles County had a wet winter last year, followed by a drought since May. The Santa Anna winds came along and when the fire started blew the embers all over.

I am from Colorado. Along the foothills of the Rockies strong winds can come whipping out of the canyons. In 2021 the front range of Colorado had a very wet spring and then a drought, It did not snow in the Denver area until after Christmas, which is almost unprecedented. Right after Christmas there were two small fires in a canyon and the winds, which were gusting to 100+ miles an hour, started to blow the embers.

This developed into what in Colorado is referred to as the Marshall fire. Marshall is a small town south of Boulder. The area around Marshall is only partially developed. But about 1,000 structures were destroyed and the fire darn near got to the City of Boulder. Once the wind starts blowing Mother Nature takes over.
 
It might be, But I think the extra staff would have had to extinguish the fire very early in the process. Once the embers start flying in the wind any department is going to be overwhelmed.

Los Angeles Country suffered from a wet winter followed by essentially no rain until now. The Santa Anna winds came up and started transporting the embers over the firefighters heads. /

Los Angeles County had a wet winter last year, followed by a drought since May. The Santa Anna winds came along and when the fire started blew the embers all over.

I am from Colorado. Along the foothills of the Rockies strong winds can come whipping out of the canyons. In 2021 the front range of Colorado had a very wet spring and then a drought, It did not snow in the Denver area until after Christmas, which is almost unprecedented. Right after Christmas there were two small fires in a canyon and the winds, which were gusting to 100+ miles an hour, started to blow the embers.

This developed into what in Colorado is referred to as the Marshall fire. Marshall is a small town south of Boulder. The area around Marshall is only partially developed. But about 1,000 structures were destroyed and the fire darn near got to the City of Boulder. Once the wind starts blowing Mother Nature takes over.

I was here for Marshall. In fact, five days earlier, I was in Boulder for Christmas and a bunch of us went through where the fire would later start and went for a hike in nearby Eldorado Canyon State Park because the weather was so warm.

My sister and her family live right where you come into Boulder, off Table Mesa, four miles north of where the fire started. Once it started, it was like SoCal, winds coming out of the canyons at over 100 mph and with everything so dry, there was no stopping it. My sister and her family were ready to go, but it stayed a mile to the east of them.

It went to the northeast, jumped Highway 36 and through Superior and Lafayette and singed a part of Broomfield. 36 hours later, we got our first snow of the season and put an end to the fire.
 
My cousin lost his house in the Marshall Fire, and yes, it moved incredibly fast. So fast that they were still in the house when flames were right outside their door and were lucky to get out with what they could. I helped with what I could since I live in another state. They decided to rebuild, but many neighbors did not. One guy lost his job the day before and then his house.
 
Without looking, I'm going to guess that the vast majority of LA City Fire's calls for service are medical calls, not fire, and they likely spend most of their budget on manpower to respond to those calls. I will also co-sign @LanceyHoward's hypothesis that no amount of money would have helped them prevent or contain these fires.
 

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