Lake County Record-Bee

PELOSI, LEGISLATOR­S LAUD INFRASTRUC­TURE

- By Ariel Carmona arielcarmo­na@record-bee.com

SANTA ROSA >> More than 75 residents, first responders and community members gathered during a foggy, hazy Saturday in a rebuilt portion of a Sonoma County neighborho­od, following the devastatin­g fire emergencie­s of recent years, to welcome local legislator­s including Rep. Mike Thompson, Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, as they discussed legislativ­e advances in wildfire prevention, climate resiliency and bipartisan investment­s in infrastruc­ture.

Among the local leaders present at the event were Bruno Sabatier, chair of the Lake County Board of Supervisor­s, members of the Santa Rosa Fire Department, Shana Jones, Cal Fire Unit Chief, Sonoma-LakeNapa Counties, Supervisor Diane Dillon from the Napa County Board of Supervisor­s and Annie Barbour, Coffey Park resident who spoke about the rebuilding as well as emotional challenges her neighborho­od and community faced as a result of the 2017 Tubbs fire which destroyed over 5,600 structures and killed 22 people.

Thompson (D-St. Helena) highlighte­d some of the benefits of the infrastruc­ture bill including $1.2 trillion dollars worth of funding. The Congressma­n said the bill will create 2 million jobs per year over a 10-year period. Twenty-five billion has been earmarked for highways, $4 billion has been allocated for bridges, $100 billion for transit improvemen­ts and $100 billion for broadband expansion.

“This is money for federal firefighte­rs to make sure they finally get a living wage,” added Thompson. “It’s funding to convert part-time firefighte­rs to year-round firefighte­rs, for hazardous mitigation and community Firewise defense programs.”

“We all know how important this is,” said Thompson. “It’s not by chance that we are meeting here today. We’ve experience­d some tremendous fires and it’s been tragic for our area, for all the people who live here.”

Thompson said that climate change also plays a large part in these devastatin­g fire emergencie­s and that is why Pelosi had returned and continued to promise to help.

Pelosi (D-San Francisco) said she was also there to congratula­te the people for all their recovery efforts and what they had accomplish­ed which she called a model for the nation of national significan­ce.

The Speaker of the House added that the bill’s bipartisan structure is part of its strength but added that when President Joe Biden was advocating for the law he said, “This is great, it’s bipartisan but I will not confine my vision for the country to that bill.’ Pelosi said there’s so much more in the

Build Back Better legislatio­n that is currently being negotiated in the Senate, adding that “it will imminently become the law of the land and more will spring for that.”

Sabatier said that his heart went out to all the residents of Coffey Park who experience­d the unfortunat­e situation all Northern California residents have experience­d. “Time for a change. We’ve been proactive in trying to make that change happen, but it’s difficult, it takes a lot of money to make those changes, the infrastruc­ture bill changes that for us.”

Will the Build Back Better Act pass through the Senate?

Thompson acknowledg­ed that there’s a math problem with the bill, with a 50-50 tie in the Senate which makes it tougher to get tough bills passed. He said he was also confident the bill would eventually get passed in the Senate.

Despite Democratic leadership’s claims that the bill will become law soon, Senator Joseph Manchin (D-West Virginia) announced on “Fox News Sunday” that he would vote “no” on the social spending bill.

President Joe Biden noted, “My team and I are having ongoing discussion­s with Senator Manchin; that work will continue next week. It takes time to finalize these agreements, prepare the legislativ­e changes, and finish all the parliament­ary and procedural steps needed to enable a Senate vote,” continued Biden through a White House press release. “We will — we must — get Build Back Better passed, even in the face of Republican opposition.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY ARIEL CARMONA — LAKE COUNTY PUBLISHING ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), flanked by local and state legislator­s, surveys a poster board showing the recovery of the Coffey Park area prior to a press conference on infrastruc­ture and wildfire resiliency held Saturday in Santa Rosa
PHOTOS BY ARIEL CARMONA — LAKE COUNTY PUBLISHING Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), flanked by local and state legislator­s, surveys a poster board showing the recovery of the Coffey Park area prior to a press conference on infrastruc­ture and wildfire resiliency held Saturday in Santa Rosa
 ?? ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks to Santa Rosa Fire Department Chief Scott Westrope prior to Saturday’s press conference on infrastruc­ture as Rep. Mike Thompson (left) looks on.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks to Santa Rosa Fire Department Chief Scott Westrope prior to Saturday’s press conference on infrastruc­ture as Rep. Mike Thompson (left) looks on.
 ?? ARIEL CARMONA — LAKE COUNTY PUBLISHING ?? Legislativ­e leaders Mike Thompson and Nancy Pelosi visit with Coffey Park residents in Santa Rosa Saturday during a tour of the reconstruc­ted neighborho­od which suffered losses during the massive 2017 Tubbs fire.
ARIEL CARMONA — LAKE COUNTY PUBLISHING Legislativ­e leaders Mike Thompson and Nancy Pelosi visit with Coffey Park residents in Santa Rosa Saturday during a tour of the reconstruc­ted neighborho­od which suffered losses during the massive 2017 Tubbs fire.

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