bimmerpost/
BMW M2 and 2-Series Coupe
BMW Garage BMW Meets Register Today's Posts
home
BIMMERPOST Universal Forums Off-Topic Discussions Board

Post Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
      01-09-2025, 02:52 PM   #23
Tyga11
Lieutenant Colonel
3598
Rep
1,777
Posts

Drives: M3 Comp
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Arizona

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by vreihen16 View Post
My DW is a municipal water plant operator, and I get to hear the challenges of juggling water between six different water towers in a hilly locale to keep the pressures up and supplies full every single day. The combined system can only process/move/store so much water, and having every fire truck in the LA region drawing from hydrants and thousands of homeowners running their garden hoses trying to save their houses is obviously more than the system was ever designed to handle. But, what the heck do I know.



I saw a TV interview on the UK news of a younger guy who lost his house. Because of blackouts, he had to change hotels four times so far since evacuating. His projected timeline is a minimum of three years to just sort through the insurance mess to start the rebuild process, and his family is actively searching for another house to buy instead of watching the horrors on the TV news. I can only imagine what house prices will look like in the aftermath of this disaster, and am wondering if the cities involved will even let the people rebuild at the current property densities?????
I'm not questioning your expertise however I am always skeptical when I hear government officials covering for themselves. The first people to come out and use the theory you are suggesting was the LAFD chief. California has dealt with wild fires for decades now. If what you are saying is true, it's surprising. They were basically sitting ducks.
Appreciate 1
2000cs4063.50
      01-09-2025, 03:07 PM   #24
NSXR
ホンダ
NSXR's Avatar
576
Rep
119
Posts

Drives: Acura NSX
Join Date: Jan 2025
Location: USA

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by hubbahubba View Post
A friend since 4th grade lived in Palisades. He had 2 houses, right next door to each other. This is all that’s left. Total loss.
The houses behind are untouched?
Appreciate 0
      01-09-2025, 03:18 PM   #25
BMWGUYinCO
Second Lieutenant
BMWGUYinCO's Avatar
4447
Rep
284
Posts

Drives: 22 M850 Convertible '23 X3 M40
Join Date: Apr 2020
Location: Colorado

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by NSXR View Post
The houses behind are untouched?
See, the winds whip burning embers that fly through the air, and where they land can be indiscriminate. On one street just two blocks from us, the ENTIRE ROW of homes were gone. On the next street over, only one home along the entire block burned down (and it was in the middle of the row).
Appreciate 1
NSXR576.00
      01-09-2025, 04:20 PM   #26
vreihen16
Recovering Perfectionist
vreihen16's Avatar
22784
Rep
1,037
Posts

Drives: BMW-less :(
Join Date: Jun 2019
Location: Orange County, NY

iTrader: (0)

Garage List
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tyga11 View Post
If what you are saying is true, it's surprising. They were basically sitting ducks.
It's not surprising at all. William Mulholland's century-old water system was not designed for today's urban sprawl and over-development in the LA basin, just like the power grid is not capable of supplying worst-case electric demands without rolling blackouts.

I served on our town's comprehensive plan committee to re-write the 10-year growth plan, and building density per acre is a huge deal that we and urban planners needed to factor in for water, sewer, schools, traffic, etc. Obviously, stacking houses one on top of the other and then adding accessory dwelling units (pool houses with separate residents) is a recipe for urban planning disasters, and I for one am not surprised at the results.....
__________________
Currently BMW-less.
Appreciate 4
BMWGUYinCO4446.50
Buug95924970.00
afadeev1236.00
eugenebmw2246.50
      01-09-2025, 04:24 PM   #27
Tyga11
Lieutenant Colonel
3598
Rep
1,777
Posts

Drives: M3 Comp
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Arizona

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by vreihen16 View Post
It's not surprising at all. William Mulholland's century-old water system was not designed for today's urban sprawl and over-development in the LA basin, just like the power grid is not capable of supplying worst-case electric demands without rolling blackouts.

I served on our town's comprehensive plan committee to re-write the 10-year growth plan, and building density per acre is a huge deal that we and urban planners needed to factor in for water, sewer, schools, traffic, etc. Obviously, stacking houses one on top of the other and then adding accessory dwelling units (pool houses with separate residents) is a recipe for urban planning disasters, and I for one am not surprised at the results.....
I was being sarcastic. People in California pay a ton in taxes. This is what they get for it. You get who you vote for though
Appreciate 2
2000cs4063.50
eugenebmw2246.50
      01-09-2025, 04:40 PM   #28
UncleWede
Long Time Admirer, First Time Owner
UncleWede's Avatar
United_States
18664
Rep
9,445
Posts

Drives: G01 X3 M40i Dark Graphite
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Oxnard, CA

iTrader: (0)

Speaking of urban sprawl, and containing it. I am on the board of a small mutual water company. We supply water to 2 blocks on 2 streets. The local fire code changed a few years ago and we now are in a building moratorium. The code says we basically need 100,000 gallon tank before we can build again. We used to be able to claim the water in the aquafer as fire flow storage. The change was because even if we have a generator to run the pumps, those can fail too during a fire, so it all has to be gravity-fed to supply 50 gal/minute for 2 hours. If anyone wants to contribute to our GoFundMe for $1.2m, I'll send you a link Our current 2 tanks hold a total of 5000.

In Palisades, they not only couldn't refill those 3 MILLION gallons, but to push it up hill to the hydrants requires pumps, that require electricity, which was cut/failed due to fires.

We are upgrading a small section of our main pipes to go from 4" to 6". For about 300 linear' it's running us upwards of $800k, and our street is basically flat. Palisades is some very hilly areas, so replacing the original main lines to those 3 tanks would be horrendously expensive, and with the new Prop 218 requirements, the public has to approve any proposed rate increases.

3 MILLION gallons of water, and it didn't put a dent in those fires. Once the winds died down, the aerial assault could be used. Those can get water from reservoirs that hold 100s m gallons of water, or even the local pools, as fast as they can suck them up into the belly of the aircraft.
__________________
I have romped on her and I giggled like a drunk infant the entire time. - Sedan_Clan
Appreciate 10
BMWGUYinCO4446.50
DrVenture1477.00
hubbahubba11947.00
RickFLM411950.50
lakefront690.50
vreihen1622783.50
afadeev1236.00
M_Six20033.00
eugenebmw2246.50
      01-09-2025, 05:43 PM   #29
kscarrol
Brigadier General
kscarrol's Avatar
United_States
9913
Rep
4,141
Posts

Drives: 2021 X3 M40i, 1974 2002 Tii
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Greenville, SC

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by hubbahubba View Post
A friend since 4th grade lived in Palisades. He had 2 houses, right next door to each other. This is all that’s left. Total loss.
Would hit the appreciate button but that doesn’t seem appropriate. Awful to see but at least they are safe.
__________________
2021 X3 M40i
1974 2002tii, Inka, 5 sp manual
BMWCCA # 327475
Appreciate 5
DrVenture1477.00
hubbahubba11947.00
wizardofOz1990.00
DocL2140.50
      01-09-2025, 06:06 PM   #30
Esteban
Major General
Esteban's Avatar
United_States
58321
Rep
7,241
Posts

Drives: a slow car fast
Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: SoCal

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by kscarrol View Post
Would hit the appreciate button but that doesn’t seem appropriate. Awful to see but at least they are safe.
Sometimes hitting the appreciate button means you're showing support, like you might do for a sick member who posts about his illness. At least that's how I see it.

Last edited by Esteban; 01-09-2025 at 06:13 PM..
Appreciate 7
cmyx6go17050.50
kscarrol9912.50
hubbahubba11947.00
vreihen1622783.50
wizardofOz1990.00
Gemini562229.50
      01-09-2025, 06:21 PM   #31
kscarrol
Brigadier General
kscarrol's Avatar
United_States
9913
Rep
4,141
Posts

Drives: 2021 X3 M40i, 1974 2002 Tii
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Greenville, SC

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Esteban View Post
Sometimes hitting the appreciate button means you're showing support, like you might do for a sick member who posts about his illness. At least that's how I see it.
I know, my comment was not meant as a criticism of those who did appreciate.
__________________
2021 X3 M40i
1974 2002tii, Inka, 5 sp manual
BMWCCA # 327475
Appreciate 4
Esteban58320.50
hubbahubba11947.00
wizardofOz1990.00
DocL2140.50
      01-09-2025, 06:33 PM   #32
hubbahubba
Captain
hubbahubba's Avatar
11947
Rep
879
Posts

Drives: M3CX
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Az

iTrader: (0)



My buddy’s son’s Instagram. Absolutely heartbreaking.
Appreciate 3
Esteban58320.50
kscarrol9912.50
wizardofOz1990.00
      01-09-2025, 06:40 PM   #33
Esteban
Major General
Esteban's Avatar
United_States
58321
Rep
7,241
Posts

Drives: a slow car fast
Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: SoCal

iTrader: (0)

Wow, that's really something, Hubba. So sorry for them, and all that lost their homes.
Appreciate 1
hubbahubba11947.00
      01-09-2025, 06:44 PM   #34
Esteban
Major General
Esteban's Avatar
United_States
58321
Rep
7,241
Posts

Drives: a slow car fast
Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: SoCal

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna confirmed five deaths between the Pacific Palisades and Eaton Fire. He said the death toll will change. Luna had previously said that all five deaths were from the Eaton Fire. Malibu Mayor Doug Smith has also confirmed one additional death.
https://www.cnn.com/weather/live-new...tional%20death.
Appreciate 1
hubbahubba11947.00
      01-09-2025, 07:16 PM   #35
jmg
Lieutenant General
jmg's Avatar
20065
Rep
14,454
Posts

Drives: G87 M2
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Orange County, CA

iTrader: (1)

Garage List
We are hosting friends and family at our house, which is not in an evac zone. In an attempt to lighten the mood we left the christmas lights on and called it the 2025 LA is On Fire party. We watched from their ring camera as the embers got increasingly brutal and then all of a sudden bright lights just off camera. It was the house next door burning down. Scary af.
__________________

2025 G87 ///M2 LCI - Stock
Previous: 2022 G82 M4 Comp X-Drive • 2018 F80 M3 CS • 2016 F80 M3
Appreciate 0
      01-10-2025, 12:28 AM   #36
vreihen16
Recovering Perfectionist
vreihen16's Avatar
22784
Rep
1,037
Posts

Drives: BMW-less :(
Join Date: Jun 2019
Location: Orange County, NY

iTrader: (0)

Garage List
I imagine that Sedan_Clan is safe, and banking enough OT pay on traffic and looter detail to buy his next Porsche cash.

Two pieces of news from the LA TV news talking heads:

1) The LA Sheriff's Department has requested National Guard assistance for looter patrols.

2) One of Quebec's Super Scoopers was damaged this afternoon by a drone collision to its wing, and is grounded for the time being. The FAA told reporters to ask Cal-Fire for details, who has not made a statement yet. My gut feeling is that the drone was being operated by a fire department, based on the press runaround.....
__________________
Currently BMW-less.
Appreciate 3
Esteban58320.50
wizardofOz1990.00
M_Six20033.00
      01-10-2025, 05:17 AM   #37
bayarea328xit
Lieutenant
United_States
626
Rep
543
Posts

Drives: 19 i3s; 07 328xit (sold)
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Bay Area, CA

iTrader: (0)

From the Instagram post above: Are there really people without fire insurance living in that area? It is a nice neighborhood - how can this be real? Madness...
Attached Images
 
Appreciate 0
      01-10-2025, 06:37 AM   #38
vreihen16
Recovering Perfectionist
vreihen16's Avatar
22784
Rep
1,037
Posts

Drives: BMW-less :(
Join Date: Jun 2019
Location: Orange County, NY

iTrader: (0)

Garage List
Quote:
Originally Posted by UncleWede View Post
The local fire code changed a few years ago and we now are in a building moratorium. The code says we basically need 100,000 gallon tank before we can build again.
Is there space for a community swimming pool at a high spot? An olympic-sized pool holds over 600K gallons, so a smaller community-sized pool with a stand pipe or an emergency drain into the water mains should be easy enough...cheaper than a steel tower...and serve the community if everyone doesn't already have their own pools.

If there is no high spot for a pool, I can see an elevated water tank being crazy expensive but (as everyone can see if they turn on a TV this week) necessary.....
__________________
Currently BMW-less.
Appreciate 3
M_Six20033.00
wizardofOz1990.00
Buug95924970.00
      01-10-2025, 10:28 AM   #39
Reborn_
Lieutenant
312
Rep
417
Posts

Drives: '22 X5 s-drive40i; '07 Z4MC
Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: SoCal

iTrader: (7)

Quote:
Originally Posted by bayarea328xit View Post
From the Instagram post above: Are there really people without fire insurance living in that area? It is a nice neighborhood - how can this be real? Madness...
Palisades is a wealthy area. Many who have a paid off home don't keep insurance. Remember, in nice areas of SoCal, the value is in the land, not the dwelling.

My family is impacted, unfortunately. All are safe, though.
Appreciate 1
      01-10-2025, 10:35 AM   #40
UncleWede
Long Time Admirer, First Time Owner
UncleWede's Avatar
United_States
18664
Rep
9,445
Posts

Drives: G01 X3 M40i Dark Graphite
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Oxnard, CA

iTrader: (0)

Many who don't have insurance were recently CANCELED by the companies that want to bail out of Cali.

Before his death 2 year ago, my dad quit carrying insurance on the retreat cabin. For a while after his death I checked and nobody would even write a policy. Now its about $7500/6 months for fire only. ROI is about 10 years to rebuild . . .
__________________
I have romped on her and I giggled like a drunk infant the entire time. - Sedan_Clan
Appreciate 2
      01-10-2025, 10:37 AM   #41
UncleWede
Long Time Admirer, First Time Owner
UncleWede's Avatar
United_States
18664
Rep
9,445
Posts

Drives: G01 X3 M40i Dark Graphite
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Oxnard, CA

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by vreihen16 View Post
Is there space for a community swimming pool at a high spot?
High spot is about 3' above the low spot in the community
I do like the outside thinking though!
__________________
I have romped on her and I giggled like a drunk infant the entire time. - Sedan_Clan
Appreciate 2
vreihen1622783.50
Buug95924970.00
      01-10-2025, 10:55 AM   #42
2000cs
Captain
4064
Rep
1,003
Posts

Drives: Potato
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: USA

iTrader: (1)

So several thousand homes are gone. Some thoughts on rebuilding.
1. Near the beaches, the Coastal Commission will be at best a bottleneck and likely will try to prevent rebuilding.
2. Demand for architects will be high, and it will take a long time to get plans drawn up.
3. Permitting (local jurisdiction) will be badly bottlenecked and take a very long time to complete, especially if changes are required to the plans
4. Water availability/limitations may impact the ability to rebuild.
5. Contractors, especially the good ones, will be in high demand, another bottleneck. Some materials may be short as well.
6. So, 3 years seems a reasonable estimate to have a home to move into. During that time rentals will be in high demand, pushing up prices and pushing out current tenants
7. Once the home is rebuilt, the property will be reassessed. My understanding is under CA law (Prop 13) the property is assessed at market value if remodeled and two walls are not remaining. Otherwise the property tax can only increase a small percentage each year. So it is possible some will see property taxes double, triple or even increase ten-fold; forcing many to sell. Similarly, if someone chooses to buy and not rebuild (sell the fire lot), they will pay property taxes at the purchase price of the new property and not the tax basis of the burned property. SEE CORRECTION IN EDIT BELOW

This disaster will keep on for a while.

EDIT: Apparently a homeowner that loses their home because of a wildfire can take their property tax assessment with them to a new home or into their rebuilt home if they do that within two years. I doubt any homes will be rebuilt within two years for the reasons mentioned above, but wanted to correct #7.

Last edited by 2000cs; 01-10-2025 at 02:53 PM..
Appreciate 2
afadeev1236.00
      01-10-2025, 11:31 AM   #43
JMcLellan
Lieutenant Colonel
JMcLellan's Avatar
2912
Rep
1,712
Posts

Drives: 2020 X5M Comp
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: MN

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by UncleWede View Post
Speaking of urban sprawl, and containing it. I am on the board of a small mutual water company. We supply water to 2 blocks on 2 streets. The local fire code changed a few years ago and we now are in a building moratorium. The code says we basically need 100,000 gallon tank before we can build again. We used to be able to claim the water in the aquafer as fire flow storage. The change was because even if we have a generator to run the pumps, those can fail too during a fire, so it all has to be gravity-fed to supply 50 gal/minute for 2 hours. If anyone wants to contribute to our GoFundMe for $1.2m, I'll send you a link Our current 2 tanks hold a total of 5000.

In Palisades, they not only couldn't refill those 3 MILLION gallons, but to push it up hill to the hydrants requires pumps, that require electricity, which was cut/failed due to fires.

We are upgrading a small section of our main pipes to go from 4" to 6". For about 300 linear' it's running us upwards of $800k, and our street is basically flat. Palisades is some very hilly areas, so replacing the original main lines to those 3 tanks would be horrendously expensive, and with the new Prop 218 requirements, the public has to approve any proposed rate increases.

3 MILLION gallons of water, and it didn't put a dent in those fires. Once the winds died down, the aerial assault could be used. Those can get water from reservoirs that hold 100s m gallons of water, or even the local pools, as fast as they can suck them up into the belly of the aircraft.
This is very good context compared to the pure crap being spued by some people on social media. The amount of people without actual context blaming the fire department, the government, not removing brush, being proactive with fire prevention, etc. I even heard a famous billionaire talk about how CA is now routing water away from reservoirs (which would have helped better equip firefighters) to help the smelt fish?? Take a step back and look at what is happening and what has happened. It is absolutely horrendous and every one there is trying as hard as they can to help, and I assume no one in leadership positions would just simply avoid reasonable prevention actions to try to avoid something like this.

I cannot imagine the folks who not only lost their home but who didn't have insurance coverage, and who still have a bank loan. Oofda.
__________________
2020 X5M Competition
2024 M2- Sold
2019 M240i- Sold
Appreciate 3
afadeev1236.00
vreihen1622783.50
M_Six20033.00
      01-10-2025, 11:46 AM   #44
Tyga11
Lieutenant Colonel
3598
Rep
1,777
Posts

Drives: M3 Comp
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Arizona

iTrader: (0)

Quote:
Originally Posted by 2000cs View Post
So several thousand homes are gone. Some thoughts on rebuilding.
1. Near the beaches, the Coastal Commission will be at best a bottleneck and likely will try to prevent rebuilding.
2. Demand for architects will be high, and it will take a long time to get plans drawn up.
3. Permitting (local jurisdiction) will be badly bottlenecked and take a very long time to complete, especially if changes are required to the plans
4. Water availability/limitations may impact the ability to rebuild.
5. Contractors, especially the good ones, will be in high demand, another bottleneck. Some materials may be short as well.
6. So, 3 years seems a reasonable estimate to have a home to move into. During that time rentals will be in high demand, pushing up prices and pushing out current tenants
7. Once the home is rebuilt, the property will be reassessed. My understanding is under CA law (Prop 13) the property is assessed at market value if remodeled and two walls are not remaining. Otherwise the property tax can only increase a small percentage each year. So it is possible some will see property taxes double, triple or even increase ten-fold; forcing many to sell. Similarly, if someone chooses to buy and not rebuild (sell the fire lot), they will pay property taxes at the purchase price of the new property and not the tax basis of the burned property.

This disaster will keep on for a while.

Why would they build homes there again if there is a huge fire risk? Seems like a huge liability.
Appreciate 1
vreihen1622783.50
Post Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:58 AM.




g87
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
1Addicts.com, BIMMERPOST.com, E90Post.com, F30Post.com, M3Post.com, ZPost.com, 5Post.com, 6Post.com, 7Post.com, XBimmers.com logo and trademark are properties of BIMMERPOST