Lodi News-Sentinel

After fires, Santa Rosa faces questions about its future

- By Ruben Vives, Richard Winton and Hailey Branson-Potts

SANTA ROSA — The most destructiv­e wildfire in California history has left Santa Rosa at a fateful crossroads.

The city lost 3,000 homes — fully 5 percent of its housing stock — in the fire.

Thousands remain displaced, and many are not sure where they will end up or whether they can continue to afford living in wine country, where housing is expensive and in chronicall­y short supply.

“Nobody has been through this before,” Mayor Chris Coursey said Monday. “We had a housing problem three weeks ago; now we have housing problem minus 3,000 more houses.”

Many residents said they intended to rebuild as soon as possible. But officials are just beginning to work out how that will happen — and many wonder where they will live in the meantime.

“The first reaction of anyone in a situation like this is, ‘I am going to stay ... and stand my ground,’” Coursey said. “As that gets harder for some people, I hope that they will still show that resolve. It’s hard — I still have a house — for me to tell people what to do. But I really want people to stay in this community.”

Some conflicts are already emerging. Some residents are concerned about the cleanup process in neighborho­ods burned by the fires. They worry the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will remove workable home foundation­s, increasing the costs of rebuilding.

Cleaning the debris alone could last into early 2018.

Santa Rosa, with a population of 175,000, is the largest city in the region. Officials have estimated the losses to property at $1 billion just within the city limits as the Tubbs fire swept through business districts, mobile home parks, upscale neighborho­ods like Fountaingr­ove and suburban tracts like Coffey Park. For some, the next move is clear. “Rebuild. Rebuild. That is the only word you will hear around here,” said Maggie London, 64, who lost her home with dozens of pieces of art in Rincon Valley.

“There is a sense of community, we are all going to rebuild,” added Dee Dee Bridges, 70, whose 3,300-squarefoot home was destroyed in Fountaingr­ove. “We aren’t going anywhere . ... I want to rebuild fast. I haven’t got time to wait.”

For others, the future is likely to be more complex.

Oscar Wei, a senior economist at the California Associatio­n of Realtors, said the housing supply around Santa Rosa was already tight even before the fires. Sonoma County’s roughly $600,000 median home price, while high — almost triple the national average — is still lower than San Francisco, where the median price exceeds a million dollars, he said.

“Because of that difference, in the last few years, a lot of people who could not afford to live in San Francisco or Santa Clara, they move farther north, out to counties like Sonoma,” he said.

Wei said the fires not only cut into the city’s the housing supply, but are also are likely to drive up rental prices because rental properties were destroyed, too.

Still, he predicted that once new constructi­on starts and the city enters the rebuilding phase, Santa Rosa will remain a desirable place to live.

“In California, every area near the mountains, we could have fire,” he said. “I honestly don’t think that, as far as Santa Rosa and wine country are concerned, in the long term it will affect sales that much. People will go back.”

Two weeks after flames tore through the region, people remained at emergency shelters in Sonoma County.

Sitting on a bed in the shelter at the Sonoma County Fairground­s, Imelda Flores had nothing to do but contemplat­e the unknown. In many ways, she’s lucky. Her Santa Rosa home still stands. But her 12-year-old son is sick, and his desperatel­y needed caretaker is now in limbo after losing her house.

“I don’t know if I’ll be able to find another nurse now,” Flores said. “I don’t have anyone who can understand his situation.”

Her son, James Lopez, was born with a bad lung and a weak immune system. He needs a machine to pump food into his stomach, and if that’s done incorrectl­y, he could get an infection. A nurse has to stay by his side, even at school.

“I may need to go to school to personally feed him,” Flores said. “I may become his nurse.”

The mother and son have been staying at the Grace Pavilion at the fairground­s all this time because lingering smoke from the massive fires could endanger James’ fragile health. A simple cold can quickly turn to pneumonia, she said, and he will still wear a face mask at least for a few more days.

The first few nights at the shelter were the worst.

“People were waking up screaming. Some were crying, and some people would storm in here, desperatel­y looking for relatives,” she said. “It was just difficult and sad.”

The good news, authoritie­s said, was that firefighte­rs anticipate full containmen­t of the fires in hard-hit Sonoma County this week.

 ?? BRIAN VAN DER BRUG/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Power poles and lines block a street at Brookdale and Aaron Drive in Hidden Valley, where most of the homes were destroyed by fire, on Oct. 9 in Santa Rosa.
BRIAN VAN DER BRUG/LOS ANGELES TIMES Power poles and lines block a street at Brookdale and Aaron Drive in Hidden Valley, where most of the homes were destroyed by fire, on Oct. 9 in Santa Rosa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States