Bloomberg Businessweek

(Steven Felgate) #1
 POLITICS Bloomberg Businessweek August 20, 2018

36


& Home Safety, says governments need to con-
sider how to make older houses less of a risk.
Oicials haven’t imposed those requirements,
not least because they’re expensive. The federal
government already gives out billions of dollars
in so-called hazard mitigation grants to protect
homes threatened by natural disasters such as
looding, hurricanes, and earthquakes. Wright says
those grants could be used to help subsidizeire-
related retroits, but states have yet to start asking
for them—perhaps because the problem so far has
seemed less pressing than other types of hazards.
Another problem, says Molly Mowery, founder
and CEO of Wildire Planning International, which
advises governments on ire policy, is that local
governments typically wait until after a wildire to
decide what, where, and how to rebuild, which is
the exact moment when emotions are heightened.
A better approach, she says, is to establish policies
beforehand, when it’s easier to think dispassion-
ately. The trouble is that communities tend not to
spend time planning for catastrophe, and few local
oicials believe their town is next. “They’re often
not thinking about the front end of disasters, let
alone the back end,” Mowery says.
The question that may be most politically fraught
is whether it’s appropriate to keep building in the
most ire-prone areas as climate change gets worse.
“At some point, you certainly have to consider
encouraging people to move,” says R.J. Lehmann,
director of insurance policy for the R Street Institute,
which advocates market-based solutions for climate
change. Yet California’s housing crisis means the
state needs more homes, not fewer. So any policy
aimed at discouraging homes in the forest should
include pushing cities to allow for greater density.
“I don’t think zoning is usually thought of as a wild-
ire issue, but it certainly can be,” he says. “Those
two things have to go hand in hand.”
In theory, a market solution would come from the
insurance industry. Mark Ghilarducci, director of the
California Governor’s Oice of Emergency Services,
says that if the state left it up to insurers to determine

rates in ire-prone areas, people wouldn’t be able to
aford coverage. But Lehmann says California goes
too far in the other direction, preventing insurers
from raising rates based on projected future losses
from worsening wildires. Nor can insurers take into
account the rising costs of reinsurance, another indi-
cator that risks are increasing.
Since last year’s ires, lawmakers have intro-
duced bills to make it harder for insurers to raise
rates or cancel coverage for homeowners in high-
risk areas. Rex Frazier, president of the Personal
Insurance Federation of California, a trade associ-
ation, says he expects some of those bills to pass.
“We get a lot of pressure from people who are wor-
ried about the impact of climate change and all
sorts of failures to adapt,” he says. “And yet when
we try to provide the signals that many clamor for
us to provide, then others don’t like how it looks.”
Ghilarducci says the state has done as much
as anywhere in the country to cope with climate
risks. “There actually has been a lot of money and
a lot of efort put forward in trying to manage the
threat,” he says. “We have looked at this across
the board.” Asked whether it’s appropriate to keep
developing ire-prone areas, Ken Pimlott, director
of the California Department of Forestry and Fire
Protection, chooses his words carefully. “If it’s done
the correct way, it can be done,” he says. Pimlott
deines that as listening to the advice of ire oicials,
including their warnings about tightly clustered
development, building in greenbelts, inadequate
roads into a community, and meager funds set aside
for ighting ires. He adds, however, that local gov-
ernments often disregard those warnings.
Ghilarducci, asked whether it’s wise to let local
oicials overrule the recommendations of state ire
staf, suggests a deeper sort of change could be com-
ing. “Local governments have built a lot of control
and responsibility,” he says. “Some of that may be
reevaluated.”—Christopher Flavelle

THE BOTTOM LINE California has experienced record wildfires in
the past two years, but local governments and popular pressure are
preventing reforms, despite worries about global warming.

20 18 FIRES AS OF AUG. 13; CALIFORNIA ACREAGE ONLY; FIRES ARRANGED BY START DATE;DATA: CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY AND FIRE PROTECTION

The 20 Largest California Wildfires
Record number of acres

9/1932

Matilija Fire
220k acres

Mendocino
Complex Fire
345k acres

Thomas Fire
282k acres

Cedar Fire
273k acres

7/2018
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