Los Angeles Times

Pioneer or refugee?

Re “California needs to learn from its fires,” editorial, Oct. 28

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Although my wife and I lived in Idyllwild for 13 years, loving the forest and community, we recognized the constant threat of fire. We and others co-founded the Mountain Communitie­s Fire Safe Council and worked with the U.S. Forest Service and Cal Fire to educate the public about the need for hardening their properties and actively helping homeowners reduce fuel and dead trees around their homes.

The council has accomplish­ed a great deal and is continuing that work. But we always warned that a wind-driven fire in the forest would not respect our efforts.

While understand­ing the attraction of the forest environmen­t, I agree with and embrace the recommenda­tions of your editorial calling for restrictio­ns on developing and rebuilding within the wildland-urban interface. I was shocked and dismayed by the statement by Gov. Gavin Newsom (for whom I voted) that such restrictio­ns would be against California’s “pioneering spirit.”

I suggest that your reporters ask some of the panicked people fleeing these historic fires whether they feel like pioneers or refugees. Blair Ceniceros

Claremont

On a day of wildfire tragedy, the paper of record in Los Angeles has the bad taste to perpetuate the fraudulent meme about building homes in so-called fire-prone areas.

The National Park Service has asserted many times that naturally occurring fires in our region were and remain a centennial event. That is less frequent than other recurring natural disasters in America.

The difference is not that people build in fireprone areas; the difference is that our utility companies and resource management agencies have been derelict in maintainin­g the infrastruc­ture and resources on which we, as taxpayers and captive rate payers, depend.

This is victim blaming on an epic scale, and The Times’ endorsemen­t of it is irresponsi­ble. Point the finger where it belongs — those who have failed to maintain essential infrastruc­ture and responsibl­y manage resources. Wade Major

Malibu

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS battling the Getty fire spray water on heavy brush along Sepulveda Boulevard.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times FIREFIGHTE­RS battling the Getty fire spray water on heavy brush along Sepulveda Boulevard.

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