Los Angeles Times

Saving Idyllwild

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Re “Idyllwild averted disaster,” July 28

We’ve had a family house in Idyllwild since the 1970s. It was my parents’ second home and is now a vacation house for our extended family. We’ve left it largely as my parents had it, sweetly reminding us of them.

As I watched the Cranston fire progress last week, I feared we would lose this family heirloom. I know this is a “First World problem,” and I would never compare the loss of a vacation cabin to leaving your country amid war or famine, but even with that awareness, it hurt to know that the place might burn to the ground.

Thanks to the heroism and truly surgical skills of firefighte­rs from all around Southern California, our house was saved, though the flames came within feet of our front door. To any firefighte­r who was part of the effort to save Idyllwild and the homes we love and cherish, we stand in gratitude and awe of your skills and bravery. Thank you. Dan Radlauer Los Angeles

The scorched apricot tree in my backyard reminds me of our 118-degree heat a few weeks back. A fire near Idyllwild, now largely under control, sends smoke over the Inland Empire, while more than a dozen fires rage across California.

Climate change is real. If we want to return to a time when our climate was more predictabl­e, we have to invest even more in renewable energy.

Senate Bill 100 calls for California’s power grid to draw only from renewable energy sources by 2045. We know this is possible because the state energy grid is already 30% renewable and rising.

California is blessed with sun, wind, water and waves, and we have the innovation and technology to make use of these natural resources for our energy at a competitiv­e price. We have led the way on green energy while our economy has continued to thrive.

Extreme weather, food shortages and human misery await us if we do not move to a 100% green energy future. Kris Lovekin

Riverside

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? A FIREFIGHTE­R douses hot spots along Highway 74 near Idyllwild while battling the Cranston fire.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times A FIREFIGHTE­R douses hot spots along Highway 74 near Idyllwild while battling the Cranston fire.

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