Sylvia
Flight #5342: I Will Remember You
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Fire hydrant water comes from local reservoirs, whose capacity is limited. In the 1991 Oakland Firestorm, the water pressure in the overly burdened system was at times too low for hydrants in residential areas even to function. Added to this is that there simply aren't any fire hydrants in uninhabited areas such as the open space right behind Pacific Palisades.But dozens of municipal fire chiefs are saying that a fire like Palisades could never be handled by any municipality hydrant system. They needed air support from planes and helicopters that couldn’t fly because of the wind. And cutting an upcoming budget a month ago has nothing to do with what was available this week.
I don’t understand leaving your dog behind. How can people do that. Unless they were away from home when evacuated.
Sometimes pets get so agitated by fire that they will not go into carriers or on a leash. The owners may have had to made a hard decision. I hope the dog gets a good home.I don’t understand leaving your dog behind. How can people do that. Unless they were away from home when evacuated.
Or the dog was frightened and took off before the owner could get it in a vehicle.I don’t understand leaving your dog behind. How can people do that. Unless they were away from home when evacuated.
Fast-moving, wildly unpredictable and catastrophic in the damage it caused along a vast swath of prime coastline, the Palisades fire ultimately spared the Villa and its more than 44,000 objects, including many Roman, Greek and Etruscan relics dating from 6500 BC to AD 400.
J. Paul Getty Trust President and Chief Executive Katherine E. Fleming described for The Times the scene on the ground and how she and her staff worked from a conference center-turned-war room at the Getty Center in Brentwood, about 10 miles away — all while 16 staff members remained at the Villa to implement emergency protocols.
"We did get lucky in some ways, and people were rushing around," Fleming said in an interview Wednesday evening after the most immediate danger had passed. "But there were also a lot of people who were really thoughtful about this over a long period of time, and I think that clearly paid off for us."
People on social media and news sites may have seen images of flames whipping next to a structure by the Getty Villa sign on Pacific Coast Highway. That structure was not the museum but rather Villa de Leon, a 35-room Italian Revival mansion that's not affiliated with the museum.
Villa teams continued to monitor the fire threat throughout the night, and for now the Villa appears to be safe.
"A lot of what there was to burn has burned. The rosemary is gone. The low-level vegetation is gone," said Fleming, who added that she was too superstitious to say the danger had completely passed.
Notwithstanding leash laws, some people still let their dogs roam free. Even more people let their cats roam free. There are still plenty of houses in places like Pacific Palisades that do not have fences.I don’t understand leaving your dog behind. How can people do that. Unless they were away from home when evacuated.
I hope the dog finds its family.Sometimes pets get so agitated by fire that they will not go into carriers or on a leash. The owners may have had to made a hard decision. I hope the dog gets a good home.
Yes, let’s not forget the adorable Izzie who was frightened and ran when there was not a moment to spare:Or the dog was frightened and took off before the owner could get it in a vehicle.
My brother's dog, when it was a young, healthy & full of energy would zoom right out the front door and take off up and down the street, zipping & darting away anytime you got close enough to grab it by its scruff and get it back inside. Such an annoying little terrier mutt that every single family member, myself included, chased after on more than one occasion. A dozen years older, she's not nearly as interested in escaping any time the front door opens nowadays - and I like her a lot more as a result, lol.
An emergency alert issuing an evacuation warning for all of Los Angeles County was sent out by accident, according to officials.All of my friends here in Hollywood / West Hollywood got mandatory evacuation again Im putting on KTLA there seems to be fires in West Hills but that’s not near Hollywood. Somewhat close. KTLA says they know we all got mandatory evacuation and they’re trying to find out what’s going on
Hmmm that’s not how KTLA presented it, or CNN
Honestly, I don't think that anything that comes out of any city official or department spokesperson's mouth right now, in the immediate aftermath, when they're clearly CYAing like mad, can be trusted.![]()
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass pushes back against criticism over management of wildfires
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass repeatedly dodged questions about her leadership and alleged lack of initial presence during the ongoing wildfires affecting the area.abcnews.go.com
It's discussed in the section boldly highlighted "Clearing up confusion over fire department budget."
Honestly, I don't think that anything that comes out of any city official or department spokesperson's mouth right now, in the immediate aftermath, when they're clearly CYAing like mad, can be trusted.
There is zero excuse for the hydrants having no water pressure. None. These people who are attempting to explain away their incompetence need to take ownership & responsibility for their colossal screw-up. More Truman, less toddler, please.
Not to mention if all of these things are going to be lost to the fires I'd rather someone take them so they can be salvaged/used etc. This kind of thinking reminds me of people wanting to shoot "looters" who were swimming away with perishables, diapers, and electronics when New Orleans was flooding. I guess we'd rather shoot people scavenging in a weather-related catastrophe than let people take things for free that will be unusable and/or destroyed anyway.Sure, what this horrific situation really needs is vigilantism and murder.
Your suggestion is indeed ugly.
No, only good explanation is wokeness and minorities- don't bring logistics into this.There are many reasonable explanations for decreased water pressure
Bless the Canadian firefighters, and the other states including NM for giving lifesaving service
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/toronto-los-angeles-wild-fire-metro-morning-1.7426834
https://bsky.app/profile/fernandez.house.gov/post/3lfd57nyod22n
But there is one very simple one, which I have already touched on. Firefighters are using up water from local reservoirs faster than they can be replenished from sources like Lake Mead and the Owens Valley, which are hundreds of miles away. Certain people need to brush up on their physics and geography.There are many reasonable explanations for decreased water pressure
These are not homes that have been destroyed. These are homes that have been evacuated and the residents haven't been allowed to return home yet because of the continuing fire danger. Looters are literally going in and stealing from homes that are intact and, in some cases, even have electricity - there are people who have seen looters on their Ring cameras.Not to mention if all of these things are going to be lost to the fires I'd rather someone take them so they can be salvaged/used etc. This kind of thinking reminds me of people wanting to shoot "looters" who were swimming away with perishables, diapers, and electronics when New Orleans was flooding. I guess we'd rather shoot people scavenging in a weather-related catastrophe than let people take things for free that will be unusable and/or destroyed anyway.
The local reservoirs were not full. Try that on for starters before you start mentioning the Owens Valley or Lake Mead.But there is one very simple one, which I have already touched on. Firefighters are using up water from local reservoirs faster than they can be replenished from sources like Lake Mead and the Owens Valley, which are hundreds of miles away. Certain people need to brush up on their physics and geography.![]()
The firefighter might help. I know in myI hope the dog finds its family.
Physics. Physics is hard. For hydrants to have water pressure, there has to be water in the piping. As the water gets used up, more water needs to be pumped uphill (or flow downhill) to refill hydrants. Water systems are not designed for maximum flow to last indefinitely from many hydrants simultaneously.Honestly, I don't think that anything that comes out of any city official or department spokesperson's mouth right now, in the immediate aftermath, when they're clearly CYAing like mad, can be trusted.
There is zero excuse for the hydrants having no water pressure. None. These people who are attempting to explain away their incompetence need to take ownership & responsibility for their colossal screw-up. More Truman, less toddler, please.
Did you read the article?Honestly, I don't think that anything that comes out of any city official or department spokesperson's mouth right now, in the immediate aftermath, when they're clearly CYAing like mad, can be trusted.
There is zero excuse for the hydrants having no water pressure. None. These people who are attempting to explain away their incompetence need to take ownership & responsibility for their colossal screw-up. More Truman, less toddler, please.
A spokesperson for Los Angeles City Councilman Bob Blumenfield, who previously chaired the council's budget and finance committee, told ABC News the updated budget in November saw a $53 million increase over the previous year once the council took into account the department's unappropriated balance calculation, which provides funds after the budget is approved.