Santa Fe New Mexican

Cost of living has California­ns quaking

Natural disasters such as wildfires provide moment to take stock and rethink Golden State dream

- By Conor Dougherty

Russel Lee and his wife spent the past few years going online to do the depressing math of how much less housing costs pretty much everywhere that isn’t California. They looked at Idaho, Arizona, North Carolina and Kentucky, but Lee, who was born in San Francisco and has lived in the Bay Area his entire life, could never quite make the move. Then the fires came.

In October, as the most destructiv­e wildfire in state history swept through Northern California, Lee’s three-bedroom home in Santa Rosa was consumed by the flames. He lost everything: his tools, his guns, his childhood report cards. Forced to confront the decision of whether to stay and rebuild or pick up and go somewhere else, Lee finally decided it was time to go. He used the insurance payment to buy a $150,000 home outside Knoxville, Tenn. and will soon leave California for good.

“It was like ‘welp, it’s time,’ ” Lee said. “It’s kind of like the Grapes of Wrath in reverse.”

For the half-century after World War II, California represente­d the epitome of middle-class America on the move. As people poured into the state in search of good weather and the lure of single-family homes with backyard orange trees, the state embarked on a vast natural engineerin­g project that redirected northern water southward, creating the modern Southern California and making the state the most populous in the nation.

Those days are long gone. For more than three decades, California has seen a net outflow of residents to other states, as less expensive southern cities like Phoenix, Houston and Raleigh, N.C., supplant those of the Golden State as beacons of opportunit­y. California still has a hold on the national imaginatio­n: It has lots of jobs and great weather, along with the glamour of Hollywood and the inventiven­ess of Silicon Valley.

Still, for many California­ns, the question is always sitting there: Is this worth it? Natural disasters are a moment to take stock and rethink the dream. But in the end, the calculatio­n almost always comes down to cost.

Last Friday was Saul Weinstein’s last day at work, and the start of his last weekend as a California­n. Weinstein, a 67-year-old commercial banker, retired and moved to Nevada. He has lived through several fires, and the 1994 earthquake that killed 57 people and shook him and millions of other Southern California­ns out of bed at 4:30 in the morning.

But what finally sent him packing was money. Weinstein is selling his 2,000-square-foot house in Baldwin Park, east of Los Angeles, for $570,000. He paid less than half that for a similarly sized place in Pahrump, Nev., about an hour’s drive west of Las Vegas. He moved Monday. “When you retire, you have to watch your money,” Weinstein said. “The San Andreas Fault is what they politely call ‘overdue,’ and I will be much more comfortabl­e when I’m away from that. But if it wasn’t for the cost of living I probably would have stuck around and taken my chances.”

California was once a migration magnet, but since 2010 the state has lost more than 2 million residents 25 and older, including about 220,000 who moved to Texas, according to census data. Arizona and Nevada have each welcomed about 180,000 California expatriate­s since the start of the decade. Next week, as people start decamping for the holidays, airports throughout the South and Southwest will fill up with people who are from California and are now traveling West to see the family they left behind.

Fire is an annual affair, and even as climate change stretches the burning season from summer and early fall clear into December, people here accept that pleasant weather and destructiv­e forces are linked. People who live in Florida and the Gulf Coast have made a similar peace with hurricanes. “I think you’ll find that even people who lost houses will stay here,” said Tom Sheaffer, 54, who grew up in Ventura.

Sheaffer’s wife, Mary Beth, said the image that she holds with her is the one of the iconic cross at Grant Park, which sits on a hillside overlookin­g downtown. The fire burned everything around it at the park and charred the cross itself. But it is still standing, and many Ventura residents are using its image with the hashtag #Venturastr­ong to indicate a willingnes­s to rebuild. “That makes me cry the most,” Mary Beth Sheaffer said. “We’ll get through this,” her husband said. And in the end the state always does. California has 40 million people and has grown through much worse. San Francisco was destroyed by the 1906 earthquake and fire and was rebuilt in time to host the 1915 World’s Fair. The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, the worst since 1906, was followed by the 1991 Oakland fires, followed by the 1993 Malibu fires, followed by the 1994 Northridge earthquake.

 ?? JASON HENRY/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Russel Lee poses Tuesday in front of the RV he has been living out of since he lost his home in the Tubbs Fire, in Santa Rosa, Calif. For many California­ns, natural disasters are a moment to take stock and rethink the dream of living there, but in the...
JASON HENRY/THE NEW YORK TIMES Russel Lee poses Tuesday in front of the RV he has been living out of since he lost his home in the Tubbs Fire, in Santa Rosa, Calif. For many California­ns, natural disasters are a moment to take stock and rethink the dream of living there, but in the...

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