Those things don't make sense to me. We chose to not know what gender our kids were until they were born.
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Sky looks red, so some kind of demon spawn?So are they having a boy or a girl?
We got some massive east winds which blew some trees down and power lines, dropped humidity to dangerously low levels. Some arson, not sure we'll know the causes on a lot. Accidental human stuff.How did these start? Lightening? On purpose?
Huh?
The issue is that current policy is for the forests and state/fed land as is...no preventative burns. The drier conditions, likely an effect of the warming climate, along with lower humidity, fosters the explosive fire growth.
While many say bring back the preventative burns, there is a significant liability issue if a burn gets out of control...
Those things don't make sense to me. We chose to not know what gender our kids were until they were born.
One fire out there, not sure what state, was started by a gender revel gone bad.
Yeah, some idiot in San Bernardino saw Iowa's pipe bomb murder gender reveal last year and decided to one up it with a 10,000 acre wildfire reveal.
Talk about starting out life with a disadvantage...imagine your parents killed people and/or destroyed communities to announce your birth.
These fires have a lot of causes, so do the rolling blackouts that are related.
One cause is climate change. Not necessarily the political hot button type of climate change. When many of these areas were first populated, it was a record period for rainfall. We now know from historical data that the current drought is closer to the average state of things for a lot of the west, particularly southern California. Of course, the other cause being huge populations in deserts with drinking water brought in from hundreds of miles away, causing droughts in areas which would normally not have issues.
Another is tough environmental regulations. It's difficult to get approval through the Californa "CEQA" process to do things like cut trees, do controlled burns, or other fire preventative maintenance to keep from having large forest fires on an annual basis. My understanding (last time I read up on this stuff) is that funding is there, but various issues prevent the necessary work from being done. Another factor is probably public pressure - people don't like to see trees being cut down.
Finally, tie in PG&E's poor maintenance practices and their lack of tree trimming which led to them being found liable for a fire that caused billions of dollars of damage. This led to them implementing their new policy: whenever the wind blows, de-energize all power lines at risk of tree contact. It reduces the risk of forest fire, but doesn't exactly win any friends.
What do we do about it? Other than moving tens of millions of people out of deserts in California and Arizona, I guess the best option is environmental policy reform to allow certain activities with simplified permits. Do a one time "bail out" of PG&E in the form of public funding for tree clearing to stop the de-energizing policy. Add state or federal tree clearing rules for utilities in fire prone areas to prevent future lack of maintenance. Current federal tree clearing rules do exist and have teeth, but apply only to the highest voltage lines. In these fire prone areas they should reach down to all voltage levels.
One cause is climate change. Not necessarily the political hot button type of climate change. When many of these areas were first populated, it was a record period for rainfall. We now know from historical data that the current drought is closer to the average state of things for a lot of the west, particularly southern California. Of course, the other cause being huge populations in deserts with drinking water brought in from hundreds of miles away, causing droughts in areas which would normally not have issues.
This makes more sense for southern california than northern california and OR\WA. Even then, Southern California is undoubtedly hotter and drier than it has been due to human-caused global climate change.
That's true if they chopped down all the trees there wouldn't be forest fires. Not probably the best solution for the planet.Harvesting and preventive burns would prevent many of these fires.