Los Angeles Times

Not rebuilding isn’t a solution

Re “Fire season explodes in force,” Oct. 12

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As a Tujunga resident living only a block away from the undevelope­d foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, I have respect for the danger we are in whenever the winds come out in force.

However, if this area were to burn and later be kept off-limits to redevelopm­ent, then this would become the new “wildland,” and the areas to the south would inevitably become the new “urban wildland interface.”

Under this scheme, where exactly would this shifting of areas acceptable for developmen­t end?

Every city that has ever existed in human history, by its nature, consists of an urban area surrounded by “wildland.” We should be wary of any thinking that places the blame of our cities burning on the fact that our cities have edges.

Sean LaPointe

Tujunga

Maybe TV news programs feel they are simply helping residents prepare for possible wildfires when they constantly warn that it’s “fire weather” and make note of particular­ly vulnerable areas that could easily burn.

But to a would-be arsonist, surely this is like catnip.

Yes, many recent wildfires have resulted from accidental ignition because of human recklessne­ss or malfunctio­ning power lines. But arson is always something to worry about.

There must be a better way to warn residents without highlighti­ng target zones.

David Avshalomov

Santa Monica

The Dodgers lost. The Rams and Chargers lost. The USC Trojans lost. The UCLA Bruins would have lost if they had played last weekend.

The fires are back. Homeless people are everywhere.

Still, it’s great to be here.

Louis Dawson

Los Angeles

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