So, I'm guessing you're not from California? Because it's a pretty massive state, with *very* diverse areas. @amoration
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I left LA recently after 13 years due to air quality, came to Oakland. I fled the
#LakeFire & evacuated fires 2x last year -
I'm sorry to hear that. The Lake Fire was a brush fire; not a good idea to live in brush—it will inevitably burn.
@amoration -
diverse regions need very different fire management budget help - biodiversity + energy changes how fires find fuel around us
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What do you mean by energy? Do you mean physical fuel or a spiritual thing?
@amoration -
I mean methane that drove friends to move away from
#AlisoCanyon, fracking under homes in LA. Gas leaks = urban explosion risk. -
Ok. But the methane leak is also not a cause of this fire. It's mismanagement of fire, due largely to people who live in brush.
@amoration -
right. Every area has a risk & fuel for fire. None of our budgets work for drought + high risk brush, dead trees or other fuel
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So... no. People shouldn't live in brush, and doing so doesn't compare to people who live next to oil wells for neighbors.
@amoration - 3 more replies
New conversation -
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my trees died in LA and Glendale, I am watching trees die from drought across California, especially south
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Got it, that's helpful to know. Have you been to Sierra Madres recently? Seen dead trees there?
@amoration -
I get to San Bernadinos and southern regions only a few times a year and I love traveling California, watching it evolve
End of conversation
New conversation -
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