Los Angeles Times

FIRES AFFECT POVERTY PATTERN IN STATE

Data from Napa show how disasters can reshape demographi­cs as poor residents are forced out.

- By Sarah Parvini and Ellis Simani

California’s booming tech industry is legendary for pouring increasing wealth into the San Francisco Bay Area, but new government data suggest that a far more primitive force is now helping to shape income demographi­cs in the region — wildfire.

Data released Wednesday by the U.S. Census Bureau found that while Silicon Valley enjoys some of the nation’s highest incomes, areas of wine country that were devastated by wildfire now have some of the lowest poverty rates in the U.S.

A potential factor in that drop? Homes lost to the 2015 Valley fire forced the poorest residents to leave the Napa area entirely, according to analysts.

“Where it burned in Napa was an area that was not … filled with individual­s that are well off,” said Walter Schwarm, demographe­r at the state Department of Finance. “Natural disaster is a transforma­tive force. Disasters tend to change the makeup of the population.”

The data come as California grapples with a new era of ever more frequent and destructiv­e wildfires — a trend that has collided head-on with a crucial lack of housing in many areas of

the state.

Most recently, the Camp fire in Butte County displaced tens of thousands of people in and around the town of Paradise, a primarily agricultur­al area of the Sierra Nevada foothills. Altogether, an unpreceden­ted 21,000 homes across Northern California have been lost to fire in the last 14 months. The disaster has triggered a sharp increase in housing costs as the region struggles to absorb those who were left homeless. Many of those who fled the fire are now facing the prospect of having to leave the area.

The Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, which is conducted every five years, examined nationwide trends in income, poverty and computer and internet use from 2013 to 2017. Among the findings released this week, was that four of California’s major metropolit­an areas had some of the highest median household incomes in the nation. Three of them are in the Bay Area.

Those statistica­l metro areas are San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara; the San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward area; Napa and Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura. The metropolit­an area of San Jose led all areas in the country with a median household income of $105,809 compared with the 2017 national median household income of $61,372.

The survey also found that the metropolit­an area of Napa had one of the lowest poverty rates in the U.S., at 8.2%, compared with the national poverty rate of 12.3% in 2017. The survey period included the effects of the Valley fire, which killed four people and destroyed nearly 2,000 structures in Napa, Sonoma and Lake counties.

California analysts said they were not surprised to hear that Bay Area incomes were rising, and said it was clearly the result of the technology industry.

“The tech industry has really been pumping out higher income jobs,” said Dowell Myers, a demography and urban planning professor at the USC School of Policy, Planning, and Developmen­t.

That high income trend began around 2010 or 2011, Schwarm said, and has helped to fuel rising housing costs in the region.

“In some ways, the median household income that we see here is a response to rising housing prices,” Schwarm said. “If you’re planning to attract individual­s, you’re going to need to pay them enough to live there. And that’s really what’s doing it.”

The case of Napa, however, was different. Although U.S. Census officials did not specifical­ly cite the fire in their survey results, experts in California said it was definitely a factor.

“To put it bluntly, people who were worse off before a disaster are usually hit hardest by the disaster and are least equipped to recover,” said Gordon Douglas, director of the Institute for Metropolit­an Studies at San Jose State.

Wildfires “unquestion­ably” have the potential to change the income and poverty demographi­cs of a region, Douglas said.

Driven by high winds, topography and vegetation, California wildfires have cut broad swaths through bedroom communitie­s. Such was the case with both the Valley and Camp fires, Schwarm said.

“With the fires, we end up with the core wealthy section of Napa still being there and the others being displaced,” Schwarm said. “This was sort of like Paradise in that as it moved toward Lake County, it was individual­s who are retired or working for the wineries who were looking for a reasonable place to commute from.”

But not all experts agree that the fire played a role.

USC’s Myers attributed Napa’s figures to recovery from the recession — not displaceme­nt. “The poverty rate is declining in general,” Myers said.

The frequency of massive wildfires has caused some officials to consider the wisdom of building in the socalled urban wildland interface. However, the local nature of zoning regulation­s suggests that large-scale change will not occur anytime soon.

Author Mike Davis, who has been very critical of regulation­s that allow developmen­t in fire-prone areas, said new housing in firedamage­d areas is rarely built with low-income residents in mind.

After the 1991 firestorms in the East Bay Hills within Oakland and Berkeley, houses were “rebuilt, and larger,” he said. A similar phenomenon occurred after wildfires charred the San Diego area in 2003 and 2007.

“Fire produces gentrifica­tion,” Davis said. “We are going to see this play out again and again, and it’s just a taste of what will happen with a major earthquake.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? A NAPA COUNTY official red tags a home after the Atlas fire in 2017. Areas of wine country that were devastated by wildfire now have some of the lowest poverty rates in the United States, new census data show.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times A NAPA COUNTY official red tags a home after the Atlas fire in 2017. Areas of wine country that were devastated by wildfire now have some of the lowest poverty rates in the United States, new census data show.
 ?? Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2013-2017 estimates ??
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2013-2017 estimates

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States