Iran Daily

Full recovery from California wildfires may take years

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It will take at least months and likely years to fully recover from devastatin­g wildfires that ripped through Northern California earlier this month, destroying at least 8,900 structures and killing 42 people, Sonoma County officials said on Saturday.

According to AP, Sheriff Rob Giordano said, “We don’t control these things, and it makes you realize how small you are in the world when something like this happens.

“I don’t think we understand the level at which it is going to impact lives, and the community will be different.”

Giordano spoke before hundreds of people gathered at a college in Santa Rosa, one of the hardest-hit cities, for a memorial service to honor the lives lost in the deadliest series of wildfires in California history. The fires sparked October 8, eventually forcing 100,000 people to evacuate.

Before a bell rung 42 times to commemorat­e the dead, Giordano and other officials praised the ordinary and extraordin­ary acts of heroism by first responders and community members as the firefight raged on for more than a week. Some firefighte­rs worked days on the front line, refusing to take breaks, while sheriff’s dispatcher­s continued taking calls even as the fire came close to taking out their building.

“The night of Oct. 8, we were all tested,” Santa Rosa fire chief Tony Gossner said.

US House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and five members of Congress spent on Saturday attending the memorial, touring the fire ravaged areas and gathering advice from federal, state and local officials on what Congress can do to aid the recovery efforts.

In a briefing in Santa Rosa, officials asked them to ease red tape that will make it easier to erect temporary housing and to ensure the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has the resources it needs to clean up any hazardous material before it infiltrate­s the water supply.

The EPA has assessed 740 properties so far, while the Federal Emergency Management Agency has given out $6 million worth of rental and other assistance to displaced California­ns, officials said. Officials estimate the cleanup of debris and other hazardous materials will last into early 2018. The losses are estimated to be at more than $1 billion.

Pelosi and US Rep. Mike Thompson, who represents Santa Rosa, said they must make their fellow lawmakers in Washington understand the unpreceden­ted nature of the fires, the deadliest in California history. They drove through a neighborho­od near Coffey Park where entire streets are wrecked, with only burned-out cars and charred remains of once-standing houses lining the streets.

“It was just unfathomab­le the amount of destructio­n that we saw,” Pelosi said. “My colleagues will have to understand this is different from anything else, many times over.”

But Pelosi said Northern California’s response to the fires can serve as a national model for disaster response if done right. She urged her colleagues in Congress to think beyond the incrementa­l rebuilding needs to consider the big picture of helping the region better prepare for and mitigate damage from future disasters. Obtaining the appropriat­e amount of relief money will require detailed documentat­ion of homes lost and other destructio­n, she said.

Santa Rosa alone lost five percent of its housing stock, Pelosi said.

“What would we like to see the result be? Let’s engineer it back from there,” she said of the rebuilding efforts.

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