How did the LA wildfires turn into an insatiable monster?

Caught off guard?
Supporters question LA mayor's management
Newsom admits failures
Independent investigation
Tanks full
An alternative explanation
Lack of centralized control
Overlapping authority
Coordinatiion challenge
A web of fire departments
A main figure to answer to
Emergency requirements
Scattered authority
The art of leadership
The perfect storm
Golden opportunity
Politicizing the tragedy
Caught off guard?

What went wrong with the management of the Los Angeles’ wildfires, which have killed 27 and reduced entire neighborhoods to war zones?

 

"Gross incompetence"?

Is there any truth in the political attacks from the Republicans that the water shortages and widespread destruction are proof of “gross incompetence and mismanagement of the Biden/News c u m Duo!” as President Donald Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social?

 

Supporters question LA mayor's management

After all, even the supporters of LA’s mayor Karen Bass have raised questions about her ability to manage a catastrophe on this scale, according to The New York Times.

Newsom admits failures

California state governor Gavin Newsom – referred to disparagingly by Trump as “News c u m” – has admitted that there were things that went wrong.

 

Independent investigation

He has called for an independent investigation into the local water supply, for instance, after some fire hydrants ran dry on the second day of the fires, especially in the exclusive Pacific Palisades neighborhood, Reuters reports.

 

Tanks full

The authorities have said that all the tanks available in the city were full before the wildfires took hold, including the Palisades fire.

 

"Was it just overwhelm?"

However, they also added that local water systems were not designed to put out wildfires which use inordinate amounts of water. “Was it just overwhelm?” Newsom wonders in an interview with NBC News.

An alternative explanation

The New York Times offers a different explanation for the prolonged battle to get the fires under control.

 

Lack of centralized control

According to the paper, there is a lack of centralized control in Los Angeles, unlike in New York, Philadelphia and Chicago.

 

Overlapping authority

With a population of 9.6 million, Los Angeles county is run by a board of five people, each of whose authority rivals that of Bass, the LA mayor.

 

Coordinatiion challenge

Spread across the county’s 4,751 square miles, are 45 police departments as well as the LA police department on top of dozens of different fire departments. Coordination, in these circumstances, is challenging.

A web of fire departments

For instance, the Eaton fire is being dealt with by a county fire department while the Palisades fire is in the hands of the LA Fire Department.

 

A main figure to answer to

Former California governor Gray Davis told The New York Times, “There’s a time when you need clear accountability, someone who will give orders and accept responsibility whether things work or not.”

 

Emergency requirements

“The public here seems not to want that on a day-to-day basis. But when there is an emergency, we need that. And we don’t have that system,” he added.

 

Scattered authority

California’s system of diverse governance was implemented to avoid power being concentrated in the hands of one mayor, but in certain situations too many cooks can spoil the broth.

The art of leadership

Director of the Haynes Foundation, Raphael J. Sonenshein, told The Times, “Here, it’s a little more of an art to exercise mayoral leadership.”

 

"Hard to get things done"

“The mayor might have strong opinions, but to get problems solved, you have to figure out how to get these governance agencies to work together. It’s very hard to get things done.”

 

The perfect storm

Meanwhile, it looks as though Trump and his sidekick Elon Musk will continue to make the most of the catastrophe in a bid to undermine the Democrats and push their anti-woke and deregulation agenda.

Golden opportunity

Berkeley political scientist Henry Brady told Reuters that the wildfires provided the Republicans with an irresistible store of ammunition.

 

"California is the boogeyman"

“Watch Fox News,” he said. “California is the boogeyman. California has cities out of control. California is doing all these crazy things with climate change. We are the people who have sanctuary cities and the place where people are woke beyond belief."

 

Politicizing the tragedy

“Punishing California is something that is, from their perspective, a positive good,” he added.

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