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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday November 29 2018, @05:55PM   Printer-friendly
from the a-seller's-market dept.

With California experiencing two years of unprecedented wildfires that have left more than 20,000 homes destroyed and scores dead, the private firefighting business is booming. These brigades work independently from county firefighters; their job is to protect specific homes under contract with insurance companies.

Their work can vary from pushing back flames as they approach properties to reaching the site before the blaze arrives and spraying homes with fire retardant.

But the private forces have generated complaints from some fire departments, who say they don't always coordinate with local crews and amount to one more worry as they try to evacuate residents and battle the blaze.

"From the standpoint of first responders, they are not viewed as assets to be deployed. They're viewed as a responsibility," said Carroll Wills, communications director for California Professional Firefighters, a labor union representing rank-and-file firefighters in the state.

What began more than a decade ago as a white-glove service for homeowners in well-to-do neighborhoods has expanded in recent years as the wildfire danger has increased, said Michael Barry, a spokesman for the Insurance Information Institute, a not-for-profit organization that educates the public about the insurance industry.

https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-private-firefighters-20181127-story.html


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by edIII on Friday November 30 2018, @04:34AM (2 children)

    by edIII (791) on Friday November 30 2018, @04:34AM (#768156)

    Not that simple. Nobody has been doing their job, and there was a multi-decade period in which the prevailing paradigm was stop fires at all costs everywhere to protect public land and properties. The environmentalists were wrong in this case. Forest fires are natural and required.

    We've known this for over 10 years now, and there ARE efforts underway. You might like this article regarding them [yale.edu].

    It's both the feds and the states too, and the main issue is that funds are allocated for reactionary behavior, and not the proactive behavior we desperately need. If you read the article, it's bad. Really, really bad.

    The only reason why I'm against the private companies here is that saving the properties in these cases now isn't possible when experience these "perfect storm" conditions we have. Yes, it was due to many people dropping the ball in the last few decades.

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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by khallow on Friday November 30 2018, @02:20PM (1 child)

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Friday November 30 2018, @02:20PM (#768267) Journal
    There are two problems with that narrative. First, most of these homes were probably built after that period. That is, they're probably less than two decades old (the changes in fire policy happened mostly during the 1980s, IIRC and similarly, California has seen a massive build up in residential homes over the same period). Second, California has been ignoring a lot over the past few decades. An increase in private fire fighting is just a symptom of deeper problems. I wouldn't be surprised to see similar changes in law enforcement (already doing it to an extend with prisons [dailycal.org], road building, and other vital services in which California has an opportunity to fail to deliver.
    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by edIII on Friday November 30 2018, @07:59PM

      by edIII (791) on Friday November 30 2018, @07:59PM (#768416)

      I agree with you what you said, as well as your other comments (you were on fire, no pun intended :), and California has its own share of mismanagement. What I don't think is helpful though, is forgetting the role of the feds in it. California isn't the only state with forests either, and I don't think we are responsible for most of our forests. Although, you are correct, California still needs to make sure that the feds are doing there job too. The buck stops with the top leadership in California.

      It's a blame game right now, and that's unhelpful because the blame can be shared everywhere. Let's just hope this results in more funding for prescribed burns, and working with the timber industry to clear dead forests where possible.

      I pray something constructive comes out of this.

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