Back in May I wrote about this year's wildfire response by Sacramento which so far has been to go out for more bond money. Another $5.6 billion is the current ask. It cannot be a surprise that we will have wildfires every year and should actually plan to fight them better. I know Newsom has been busy. There is a bear running wild all over the state and, of course, plenty of equity issues to resolve. I feel sorry for CalFire and all of the local units that rush to help them. We ran a huge budget surplus last year and yet the firefighting resources appear to be about the same. I don't know how much a few used DC-10s cost, but it cannot be billions.
End result? A Tahoe Air Quality Index (AQI) of 575.8 last evening around 8pm. That AQI link states "Think of the AQI as a yardstick that runs from 0 to 500." so I can attest to 575.8 being bad. Where are all the climate warriors who have time to ban natural gas hook-ups? Here's the Sierra sun at 6pm.

And before someone yells "climate change", another clear-eyed observer, Bjorn Lomborg, noted this in yesterday's Wall Street Journal
Similarly, climate change is often blamed for wildfires in the U.S., but the reason for them is mostly poor forest management like failing to remove flammable undergrowth and allowing houses to be built in fire-prone areas. Despite breathless climate reporting, in 2021 the burned area to date is the fourth-lowest of the past 11 years. The area that burned in 2020 was only 11% of the area that did in the early 1900s. Contrary to climate clichés, annual global burned area has declined since 1900 and continues to fall.
Here is some related news, but first a snippet of a LTTE to the Daily Journal by one Robert A. Nice that puts it nicely
Editor,
Does all the blame for all the homes and trees lost in the California fires go to PG&E. Did PG&E bring all this power into the woods and then invited people to build around them, no. We as citizens decided we wanted to live in the forest, and we asked PG&E to bring us power and what we didn’t do is oversee this installation. We had planning committees, we had inspectors, we should have seen the potential and planned for a defense against it. Planning and inspecting are both actions that both citizens and power companies are responsible for enacting. I’m not saying PG&E wasn’t part of the blame but we as homeowners also had the responsibility to keep PG&E in compliance.
and then we read in the Daily Post



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