Los Angeles Times

The cost of fighting wildfires

Re: “Who should pay to fight fires?” Aug. 12

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In response to the editorial about who should bear the cost of fighting wildfires, I would like to point out an entity that is seldom discussed when this topic arises.

Insurance companies collect premiums from homeowners in order to rebuild homes lost to fire. Yet, when fire department­s go out and protect those homes from wildfire, no reimbursem­ent ever comes to the fire agencies from those same insurance companies. Taxpayers at the city, state and federal level foot the bill for firefighti­ng efforts, while the insurance companies collect their premiums without any regard to the money they were saved by firefighte­rs’ efforts.

It seems that if a home is truly a “save” due to our efforts, the insurance companies should be required to pay a percentage of the home’s replacemen­t cost into a fund to reimburse the agencies that saved the home.

Of course, insurance companies will not willingly reduce their income to pay into this fund. They will pass the expense on to the homeowner by increasing insurance premiums on homes that may burn in a wildfire. While no one wants to see higher insurance premiums, it is more equitable for the expenses to be borne by those benefiting from our efforts (insurance companies and homeowners), than by the total tax-paying population. Rick Zaccaro Lake Forest The writer is a captain with the Newport Beach Fire Department.

Steps to prevent fires are much cheaper than the cost of such fires. Fallen power lines do not cause fires if they fall on bare ground.

The power utilities should not be spared the consequenc­es of wildfires they cause if they don’t take proper measures to prevent those fires. It is also reasonable to pass the costs of prevention onto their ratepayers, but it is not reasonable to simply pass the costs of fires that result from lack of prevention onto their ratepayers. The owners and managers of these utilities should be liable for the costs of fires that result from their own negligence. Thomas E. Locke North Hollywood

The axiom attributed to Benjamin Franklin that “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure” applies to California’s problem of ever increasing costs to manage fires due to ever increasing climate change. Its applicatio­n would seemingly lead to: (1) Clean up the forests per experts’ direction; (2) Build more robust utility lines to withstand higher wind speeds; (3) Don’t approve housing developmen­ts in high-risk fire areas; (4) Assess owners a “fire tax” commensura­te with the cost of fighting a fire in their area; (5) Greatly increase the penalty to humans caught starting fires on purpose. As with most complicate­d problems, there is no one silver bullet that is going to solve the problem. Eddie Dawes Hacienda Heights

A wise farmer who loses a barn to a lightning strike puts lightning rods on the new barn.

So why do we pay up to $1.6 billion yearly to fight fires rather than using this money to build firebreaks before the fire season? Bob Munson Newbury Park

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