Los Angeles Times

The next Paradise?

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Re “Could fire risk derail project at Tejon Ranch?” Dec. 4

Before the Camp fire, the Sierra Nevada foothill town of Paradise had a population of about 26,000. The fire killed 85 people and destroyed more than 18,000 structures.

Tejon Ranch Co. proposes to build 19,000 homes in its Centennial developmen­t located in the uninhabite­d northwest corner of Los Angeles County for a projected population of about 27,000. From 1964-2015, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection recorded 31 fires on or near the Centennial site without the additional risk of an urban interface.

There is no if, only when. When will Centennial burn? How many lives will be lost? How many homes will be lost? At what cost? Who will pay?

Is it possible for the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s, which must decide whether to approve Centennial, to learn from mistakes made in Butte County? Hester Bell Altadena

As a scientist deeply concerned by the growing number of California communitie­s devastated by wildfire, I appreciate the Los Angeles Times highlighti­ng how new sprawl developmen­ts like Centennial put people in harm’s way.

But the Centennial developer’s assertions that fire risk is abated by “fireproofi­ng” structures and building new fire stations are irresponsi­ble and misleading. Most fires are started by people, and those measures won’t stop fires from igniting.

Two recent studies by researcher­s at the U.S. Geological Survey and the Conservati­on Biology Institute found that leapfrog developmen­ts in fire-prone areas actually lead to increased fire risk. Natural areas that have burned in the past will likely burn again. It’s only a matter of time before Centennial leads to more human ignitions, further burdening already strained firefighti­ng resources.

To truly safeguard people from wildfire, Los Angeles County should stop green-lighting new housing developmen­ts in natural areas highly prone to fire. Tiffany Yap

Oakland The writer is a scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity.

Greed doesn’t care about you or the environmen­t.

The exploitati­on of Southern California continues. We don’t have as much of a housing shortage as we do an overabunda­nce of people.

You can’t pour 20 ounces of liquid into a 12-ounce container, but greed will try.

Everything about the Centennial project sounds wrong, and they want to build it anyway. Disgusting. SCOTT HOBSON Brea

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? A PORTION of the protected area set aside by Tejon Ranch in exchange for building Centennial.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times A PORTION of the protected area set aside by Tejon Ranch in exchange for building Centennial.

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