LA City FD not having handcrews is a different issue than what you were saying in the post I responded to. I was trying to provide a little more detail statements you gave. I highly doubt in this instance the city having handcrews would have made much difference, but who knows.
Should the City have handcrews, yeah. It's kinda crazy having USFS and county crews driving an hour deep into the city, far away from where they are most effective, to a fire a homeless person started in a dry riverbed. Which is the current MO.
I'm all for looking at what failed, criticizing, and learning. But, from my ground level view, the people and systems around LA County are better than any others when it comes to wildfire suppression in or very close to urban areas. You can build the fire suppression capabilities as high as the sky and theres still gonna be Santa Ana driven fires that don't stop til the wind dies down.
The thing in my mind is that most all fire starts during Santa Ana's are human caused. Which means we have the potential to stop them from starting. It'd be draconian, but I don't see millions of homes going away so maybe it's the deal left to make. Shut down highways and roads through wildland areas during Santa Ana's. Close forests and open spaces ahead of time. Shut off the electrical lines sooner than they do now. Build community centers run off generators people can go to for climate control if its hot. Hospitals and nursing homes, generators. Patrol homeless encampments with engines on scene ready to go. Is any of that crazier than rebuilding again and again in areas that burn again and again? Is that more expensive than making hundreds of thousands of homes fireproof, or spending even more money on the already huge-budgeted, most advanced firefighting force probably on earth?
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