California's Wildfires Exposed Failings of the State's Leadership
The potential risks from a major wildfire have been well known for years, but there was little appetite to solve those problems before disaster struck.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic lawmakers are sure to lecture us again this session about the need to step up our efforts to combat climate change. Here's a fun fact you can use to counter them, courtesy of University of Chicago research: 2020's wildfires emitted "close to double (the state's) emissions reductions achieved over 16 years."
That's right, one wildfire year obliterated decades of costly, painstaking efforts to reduce our carbon dioxide emissions. And 2020's fires were far less severe than the horrific ones we've recently witnessed in the Los Angeles area. We get wildfires nearly every year, which are constantly incinerating our climate goals. So there's no need to argue over climate science, something—if we're honest with ourselves—few of us know much about.
But any midwit can realize the state's $54 billion climate action budgets, $100-billion-plus effort to build a bullet train, and policies to outlaw internal combustion engines are for naught if it doesn't get serious about wildfire prevention. California emits an almost imperceptible amount of the Earth's emissions (thank you, India and China!), but whatever cutbacks we make are literally going up in smoke.
California should, then, follow a University of Chicago conclusion: "Wildfire emissions need to be a key part of climate policy if California is going to meet its emission reduction goals." Instead, Newsom and company use climate change as an excuse, suggesting in essence that their hands are tied until we reverse the Earth's climate trajectory.
In their view, increased heat is leading to more wildfires so the state should double down on its policies to reduce emissions. They have it roughly backward. State policymakers need to embrace policies that control wildfires, which are rendering useless our climate agenda. But to do so would expose state leaders for their incompetence.
I'm not talking about their specific reactions to the latest fires, although Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass' deer-in-the-headlights response to a reporter's questions as she exited a plane from Ghana will surely be a "what not to" example in crisis-public-relations training. I'm referring to the confluence of years-in-the-making California policies that have exacerbated the wildfires and the state's response to them.
First, the Newsom administration has talked on occasion about the need to step up brush clearance to remove the tinder. True to form, he hasn't done much about it other than earmark some dollars. The state clears maybe 125,000 acres of brush from its 19 million acres of forest (plus another 14 million that are federally owned). The state requires multiple lengthy approvals for forest-clearing projects and impedes property owners who want to fire-harden their homes.
Second, the state shrugs at its water problems. Water is only tangentially related to the fires, but had it built additional reservoirs to trap more water during storm years it might have kept the hydrants from running dry. The California Coastal Commission rejected a privately funded desalination plant in Orange County. Newsom continues to delay on water infrastructure projects. His anti-fossil-fuel campaign makes it tough for water districts to get generator permits to help move water around.
The LA nightmare also raised an issue involving something homeowners desperately need but rarely think about: insurance. In 1988, California voters approved Proposition 103, which created a prior approval system whereby the insurance commissioner (which then became an elected position) had to approve rate changes. Elected officials typically campaign to "protect" consumers and the rate-review process morphed into a long, bureaucratic process.
Over decades, insurers were unable to adjust prices to reflect their risks, so they quietly (and then not-so-quietly) exited the state rather than expose shareholders to uncontrollable exposure. Even after this turned into a crisis several years ago, state officials slow-walked some solid reforms that finally let insurers use forward-looking catastrophe models.
They went into effect right before the fires hit, so all bets are off whether they're enough to save the system. Meanwhile, the state-created insurer of last resort, the FAIR (Fair Access to Insurance Requirements) Plan is overburdened and could collapse. These are self-inflicted problems that Newsom and legislators have known about for years.
A quick note about firefighting budgets, which now are under the microscope. No one wants to criticize firefighters so most analysts neglect eye-popping salaries earned by these LA-area public employees. You'll see plenty of annual compensation packages above a half-million dollars, and one as high as $900,000. If agencies based pay on market conditions rather than union power, they could obviously hire more firefighters.
Finally, the fires reinforced the difficulty in building—or rebuilding—anything in this state. Newsom was right to suspend California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and Coastal Act rules, but he knows these rules impede everything and have done so for decades.
Why has there been no appetite for fixing these problems before disaster strikes? In fact, why hasn't the state dealt with any of these festering problems? That's the $150 billion question.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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But look how handsome Governor Greaseball is!!
Newsom 2028
So dreamy!
Is he gay?
John: Like flaming?
Russell: No but we are willing to learn!
Set his hair on fire and you will see flaming like you’ve never seen flaming before.
Lisa S 2028
“You know she wins and legalises it”
There have been a constant stream of lawsuits opposing brush clearing efforts because of the noise, pollution, and destruction of native habitat.
Well, now the brush has been cleared back.
Just in time for landslide season!
Nothing protects wildlife like burning them alive.
Democrats are so much smarter than everyone else.
"Water is only tangentially related to the fires"
LOL...the nearest reservoir was bone dry.
Food is tangentially related to starvation.
Lefty YouTubes say this isn’t true.
Seriously - that’s their claim.
It baffles the mind.
Look at it from their perspective: if you had no mind it could not be baffled. That's their super power.
Greenhut: people want to live in stupidly dangerous locations, and the government needs to do something.
But what would a libertarian say?
"But what would a libertarian say?"
If they want to live in dangerous locations, fine, but they do so at their own risk. No government subsidized insurance and no government bailouts if their home is destroyed by a predictable disaster.
lol...well that wasn't hard to explain at all. Wonder why no one else has thought of that. Oh, that won't get you elected, never mind.
The only thing dangerous about living in Palisades is that the EPA actually prohibits responsible fire management practices in the nearby "Chaparral Forest" ecosystem.
One of the most bizarre explanations that's come up around here for why the "nutbag libertarians are at it again" with all the whackjob claims about "inadequate fire management" in the areas that burned. They counter the claims that the forests where the Eaton fire started weren't adequately cleared by pointing out that "in 2023 alone, the State raked 1500 square miles of forests" (at that pace, they'll have covered 10% of the area they're responsible for managing in 2000 years). The counter to claims that proper back-burns weren't done in the area around Palisades is literally that the land there is protected by EPA rules and doing that sort of thing just isn't allowed; maybe someone can explain how pointing out that something is prohibited by law disproves claims that it wasn't done?
Gov. Hair gel always appears wearing a jacket . Maybe it's to disguise the bullet proof vest underneath. Hmmmmm?
At any rate Californians voted for this.
Elections have consequences.
I was thinking maybe he is going through menopause. The cold flashes can be a bitch.
"Elections have consequences"
Yes, they do. But there is no guarantee that the midwits will recognize those consequences and change their behavior as a result. In fact, there is massive evidence that the bad consequences of their bad choices will result in doubling down on those bad choices while pointing fingers and engaging in blame-shifting.
As a dimwit, has it affected your views? Fullwits want to know, asshole.
California voters are the problem because they didn't repeal the
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and Coastal Act rules. They keep electing the same old Democrats.
Several points here, midwits notwithstanding: first of all "emissions" are at least additive, so taking wilfdfire and other natural emissions as a baseline does not rule out the possibility that reducing intentional energy use emissions might help reduce the speed and endpoint of global warming. Secondly, I have not seen any convincing evidence that human intervention can reduce the total emissions from natural sources like wildfires, so whatever government strategy there might be should be focused on reducing the amount of damage to human property as much as possible when wildfires do occur. There is still no convincing evidence that natural and human emissions cause or accelerate global warming which may still be almost totally due to natural background cycles (like astronomical phenomena); so no justification for drastic intervention to decrease human emissions and the consequential disastrous socioeconomic dislocations that would certainly ensue.
"...so taking wilfdfire and other natural emissions as a baseline does not rule out the possibility that reducing intentional energy use emissions might help reduce the speed and endpoint of global warming..."
If you have not read "Unsettled" (Koonin), "Climate Uncertainty..." (Curry) and "Apocalypse Never" (Shellenberger), you are too stupid to comment on the matter, and given you seem to think there is an "endpoint" to climate change suggests you're too stupid regardless.
Asshole, did you read my reply to you, or are you so frightened of those who disagree your idiocy that you duck them?
You don't know what the fuck you're posting about and you are happy to keep making an ass of yourself.
Eat shit and die.
Some people have been screaming about the problems for years only to see California double down on DEI and other far-left priorities.
EV firetrucks and airplanes will fix it all! /s
Forgive my profound ignorance about CA law, but can there by another recall of Gruesome Newsom?
If so, it's long overdue.
There is a new recall effort for Newsom.
https://www.newsweek.com/gavin-newsom-recall-petition-wildfires-target-signatures-2023987
“California Governor Gavin Newsom has officially been notified of an attempt to remove him from his position after an intent to recall petition reached the required number of signatures”
They can try to recall any elected official as fast as they can gather enough signatures to call for the vote.
The problem in CA is that even if we got rid of Newsom, it's the same gaggle of fuckwits picking his replacement that elected him in the first place. At some point the Dem party will quit forcing an embargo on anyone running as a replacement. Best case, we get some relatively moderate governor for a couple of years while the 75% Dem legislature continues to churn out their dogmatic pablem, and overturn any vetoes that the new governor might attempt. Then in the next election, the only incumbents in the legislature who won't run basically unopposed (or against token opposition, often from the same party thanks to the thoroughly gerrymandered "safe" districts) are the ones taken out by term limits, and the worst of those will either then run for US Congressional seats or for Statewide offices depending on their willingness to kowtow to the unelected party leadership and public sector union leaders who actually control access to the ballot here.
Whatever one thinks of who is responsible you can see the continuing heartless ineffective handling of survivors as proof the governor and mayor are incompetent. Only Trump had great practical suggestions. But California brings this on thelmselves. Kamala for instance, worst politician of my lifetime. "We have been to the Border"
‘Border czar’ Kamala Harris panned for wearing reported $62K necklace to southern border: ‘You look ridiculous’
Here's a fun fact you can use to counter them, courtesy of University of Chicago research: 2020's wildfires emitted "close to double (the state's) emissions reductions achieved over 16 years."
Man plans, God laughs.
“ California's Wildfires Exposed Failings of the *DEMOCRATS* State's Leadership” FTFY
Still wondering how this article got through back on 1/14...
https://reason.com/2025/01/14/the-l-a-fires-are-a-natural-disaster-not-a-policy-disaster/?comments=true#comment-10869007
Here were the Reason headlines up to 1/14:
-Fires Incinerated the Facade of California Governing Competence
-Los Angeles Zoning Laws Pushed People and Homes Toward Fire-Prone Areas
-California's Fire Catastrophe Is Largely a Result of Bad Government Policies
-The L.A. Fires Are a Natural Disaster, Not a Policy Disaster
-How Awful Policies Fueled the L.A. Fires
(sings) One of these things is not like the others...