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Los Angeles City Hall (Photo: Evan Symon for the California Globe)

I Live in Pacific Palisades and I Know Who Caused the Fire

It is prima facie negligence by City leaders

By James Breslo, January 12, 2025 6:00 pm

As officials investigate what caused Los Angeles’ devasting fires, I know the answer. It was the homeless. The LA Fire Department reports that 54% of fires in 2023 were started by homeless. They responded to almost 14,000 fires that year alone related to homelessness!

Regardless of the Pacific Palisades fire was directly started by a homeless person, the extent of the destruction from the fire can be attributed to the homeless.  A few months ago, a LA City Council person reported to me that she spends 80 percent of her time on LA’s homeless problem. Eighty percent!  That does not leave much time to focus on the basic needs of the average tax paying LA resident, such as water, power, sanitation, safety, security, roads, sidewalks, traffic, parks, beaches, schools, firefighting and fire prevention. And when the mayor feels free to jet off to Ghana for a presidential inauguration on the other side of the globe, we cannot assume the other twenty percent of time is well spent.

In addition, the Council passed a budget for this year providing $1.3 Billion for homeless-related expenses. The same budget cut spending on the fire department by $17 million! 

If the Council was focused on what it should have been, it likely would have known that the main reservoir needed to fight fires in Pacific Palisades was under repair and unavailable to provide water to fight fires in the middle of the Santa Ana winds fire season. Firefighters had access to only 3 million gallons of water which ran out on the first night of fires. The reservoir normally contains 117 gallons of water!  None was available.  

According to the LA Times, the reservoir shut down in February for minor repairs to its cover.  LA’s Department of Water and Power, did not even seek bids for the repair until April! It did not hire a contractor until November! It still is not repaired! Total cost of repair: $130K, about the cost of a new Mercedes.  

Some city officials claim that based on the size of the fire even the reservoir would have run dry. But the fire would never have gotten so big but for the reservoir being inoperable! I have proof.

My Palisades neighborhood (Castellammare) was one of the first to be hit with fire.  It turns out that it was a blessing, because firefighters had water to put out the flames. I estimate based upon my inspection that approximately 80 percent of my neighborhood’s homes were spared. But soon thereafter the water dried up, and surrounding Palisades neighborhoods lost 100 percent of their homes.

In the second largest city in America with the third most expensive homes in the wealthiest and highest taxed state in the country, there simply is no excuse for this level of destruction. Over half of the homes in the town of Pacific Palisades are estimated to have been lost. It is prima facie negligence by City leaders. 

What is so frustrating is that the homeless problem, which is major, is easy to solve. The problem started when a court barred LA from enforcing its no camping law.  But that decision was overturned last year by the U.S. Supreme Court. Yet LA has not put the ban back in place. Instead, all of LA is open for camping, except a limited number of designated no camping locations, such as outside a kindergarten. But even those exceptions are now being debated by council members.

If LA simply put the ban back in place, and enforced it, the homeless problem would go away. The problem started when a court barred LA from enforcing its no camping law.  But that decision was overturned last year by the U.S. Supreme Court. Yet, unlike most cities, LA has not put the ban back in place. Instead, all of LA is open for camping: sidewalks, parks, beaches, etc.  There is a very limited number of designated no camping locations, such as outside a kindergarten. But even those exceptions are now being debated by the council. 

Instead, the council and mayor have embarked on a plan to find permanent housing for anyone and everyone on the street, no matter where they come from.  In addition to the $1.3 Billion budgeted for homeless, a new LA County sales tax for homeless housing and services will provide another estimated $1.1 Billion. 

A recent study by the Westside Current found that LA has acquired 2,750 housing units (condos, apartments, or hotel rooms) at a cost of close to $1 Billion.  One of the buildings purchased for $36.6 million still had an active website advertising “luxury” apartment featuring “spacious, modern elegance” and “sweeping views of LA.” The units feature balconies and a rooftop deck offering “stunning views of the Hollywood sign . . . in a great neighborhood with plenty of restaurants, shops and bars within walking distance, and just minutes from Beverly Hills.”  That is double the cost of the fire department budget cut.

The plan has been in place for years but has hardly put a dent in the problem.  The word is out that LA is a good place to go if you want to live outside, so more and more come.

The LA city council consists of about two thirds’ Democrats, one third Democrat Socialists of America (DSA), and zero Republicans. It uses the homeless problem as an excuse to implement its far-left agenda, which includes rent controls, tenant eviction protections, mansion taxes, free basic income, reparations, sanctuary laws, and free housing for all.

For the City’s leaders, basic services that most Angelenos care about, like firefighting, are at the bottom of their list of priorities.

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3 thoughts on “I Live in Pacific Palisades and I Know Who Caused the Fire

  1. The Google Earth view of the Santa Ynez Reservoir is dated 4/17/2019. The Reservoir is empty in the picture.
    Has this reservoir been empty for 5 years?

  2. I have a friend whose business in Van Nuys was burned down by the homeless.

    The homeless problem can be easily fixed. Make drug possession and use illegal again, including marijuana. The homeless are addicts. Give them a home in jail. That’s the way it used to be, and there was no homeless problem then. The DemolitionCrats caused this mess. The DemolitionCrats decriminalized drug possession and use. The DemolitionCrats need to be held responsible for the mass destruction and loss of life by the homeless.

    Newsom and Bass should be the first to step down from their positions.

  3. The homeless use fire as revenge against one another. If I’m mad at you for something I’m going to light your cart on fire which usually has some type of accelerant in it. This is a rampant California problem. It has just been fully exposed in Los Angeles. We all know what the solutions are which is vote out this incompetent corrupt political class from top to bottom.

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