California Faces a Housing/Wildfire Conundrum

California must ramp up housing construction to reduce the ever-widening gap between supply and demand and ease the high shelter costs that drive families into poverty and contribute to the state’s homelessness crisis.

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

However, given the seemingly nonstop series of uber-destructive wildfires California is experiencing, prudence dictates that we should also avoid housing construction in what’s called the “wildland urban interface” where fires are most likely to have cataclysmic impacts.

The friction between those two imperatives is played out in the political arena, where officialdom makes land use policy.

A case in point: Two years ago, by overwhelming bipartisan majorities, the Legislature passed a bill that would have required local governments to make fire safety a major factor in approving housing developments in fire-prone areas by compelling developers to include protective features.

The measure was passed in response to a wave of killer fires, including the Camp Fire that destroyed the rural community of Paradise in 2018, killing 86 people.

Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed the bill, saying that while he supported its aims it “creates a loophole for regions to not comply with their housing requirements.”

“Wildfire resilience must become a more consistent part of land use and development decisions. However, it must be done while meeting our housing needs,” Newsom wrote.

In the absence of clear policy from the Legislature and the governor on limiting construction in fire-prone areas of the state, Attorney General Rob Bonta has intervened.

This year he joined forces with environmental groups to stall a huge housing and golf resort project in Lake County, where wildfires are a constant threat. A Lake County judge declared that local authorities and the developer had not paid sufficient attention to the Guenoc Valley project’s vulnerability to fires.

The ruling “affirms a basic fact: Local governments and developers have a responsibility to take a hard look at projects that exacerbate wildfire risk and endanger our communities,” Bonta said. “We can’t keep making shortsighted land use decisions that will have impacts decades down the line. We must build responsibly.”

This week, Bonta took another step, issuing a set of guidelines that local authorities should follow in assessing the potential wildfire dangers of proposed developments.

It declares that it’s “imperative that local jurisdictions making decisions to approve new developments carefully consider wildfire impacts as part of the environmental review process, plan where best to place new development, and mitigate wildfire impacts to the extent feasible.”

Unveiling the policy in San Diego County, whose fast-growing inland communities are in constant peril from wildfire, Bonta said, “This is the new normal. When it comes to development, we can’t continue business as usual. We must adjust. We must change.”

Bonta’s guidelines don’t have the force of law, but they contain the implicit threat that his office will intervene if they are ignored, as it did with Guenoc Valley.

Avoiding housing in areas of extreme fire danger would seem to be common sense, but except for a narrow strip of land fronting the Pacific Ocean, the flatlands of the Central Valley and the deserts of Southern California, the state is mostly a tinderbox.

Moreover, Californians prefer, if they can, to live in single-family homes in scenic locales and therefore developers want to comply with those preferences, which is why they propose projects such as Guenoc Valley.

Click here to read the full article in CalMatters

Comments

  1. Amy Sellers says

    Well, Californians have, for years, paid to fund a department of Forestry, who are responsible for managing our forests, arranging for contracts to thin the forest, create firebreaks, and even do control burns.
    they hire youth to survey the forests in the summer, so they do have a pulse on which areas are most in need of attention. What happened to that money? Or the income potential today for it?
    The legislature has consistently put up boundaries to them doing this job.
    We need to be logging and milling in California, in multiple areas.
    Not only would it provide jobs, it would bring down the price of lumber and housing costs, and be more friendly to the environment by reducing transportation emissions, and wildfire emissions. All while saving people’s homes and livelihoods.
    Why do we fund agencies and then tie their hands?
    Where is common sense in California?

  2. The reason Calif. is faced with this is because the Democrats keep screwing with the Capitalist system and local zoning.

    There is a not so silent rush to live in Socialist Calif. because you get long term welfare, you get minimum wages that are ridiculous, and you get special treatment of illegals and those who cannot exist in the State without taxpayer welfare.

    Don’t believe there is this reported imbalance. It is a government generated issue. Remember it was Moonbeam Brown who created RHNA and then stated it was unconstitutional. It helped drive a demand that is stupid. The Dems would not increase water storage, and then destroyed thousands of acres of food producing land.

    Getting it….? Everyone deserves to live here…forget resources and land constraints.

  3. Robert Wilson says

    If the State of California managed the forests the way they used to (which included logging) we would not have this problem. Because of revenue from logging operations it used to cost the State very little money to maintain healthy forests which would allow housing construction virtually anywhere it made sense and there was demand. THE FAKE DEMOCRAT ENVIRONMENTALISTS HAVE RUINED THIS FOR EVERYBODY WITH THEIR INSANE POLICIES!!!!!!

Speak Your Mind

*