The Perfect Fire
By Mike
Davis
The sun is an eerie orange orb,
like the eye of a hideous jack-o-lantern. The fire on the flank of Otay
Mountain, which straddles the Mexican border, generates a huge whitish-grey
mushroom plume. It is a rather sublime sight, like Vesuvius in eruption.
Meanwhile the black sky rains ash from incinerated national forests and dream
homes.
It may be the fire of the century in
Southern California. By brunch on Sunday eight separate fires were raging out
of control, and the two largest had merged into a single forty-mile-long red
wall. The megalopolis's emergency resources have been stretched to the
breaking point and California's National Guard reinforcements are 10,000 miles
away in Iraq. Panic is creeping into the on-the-spot television reports from
scores of chaotic fire scenes.
Fourteen
deaths have already been reported in San Bernardino and San Diego counties, and
nearly 1000 homes have been destroyed. More than 100,000 suburbanites have been
evacuated, triple as many as during the great Arizona fire of 2002 or the
Canberra (Australia) holocaust last January. Tens of thousands of others have
their cars packed with family pets and mementos. We're all waiting to flee.
There is no containment, and infernal fire weather is predicted to last through
Tuesday.
It is, of course, the right
time of the year for the end of the
world.
Just before Halloween, the
pressure differential between the Colorado Plateau and Southern California
begins to generate the infamous Santa Ana winds. A spark in their path becomes
a blowtorch.
Exactly a decade ago,
between Oct. 26 and Nov. 7, firestorms fanned by Santa Anas destroyed more than
a thousand homes in Pasadena, Malibu, and Laguna Beach. In the last century,
nearly half the great Southern California fires have occurred in
October.
This time climate, ecology,
and stupid urbanization have conspired to create the ingredients for one of the
most perfect firestorms in history. Experts have seen it coming for
months.
First of all, there is an
extraordinary supply of perfectly cured, tinder-dry fuel. The weather year,
2001-02, was the driest in the history of Southern California. Here in San
Diego we had only 3 inches of rain. (The average is about 11 inches). Then last
winter it rained just hard enough to sprout dense thickets of new underbrush
(a.k.a. fire starter), all of which have now been desiccated for
months.
Meanwhile in the local
mountains, an epic drought, which may be an expression of global warming,
opened the way to a bark beetle infestation which has already killed or is
killing 90% of Southern California's pine forests. Last month, scientists
grimly told members of Congress at a special hearing at Lake Arrowhead that "it
is too late to save the San Bernardino National Forest." Arrowhead and other
famous mountain resorts, they predicted, would soon "look like any treeless
suburb of Los Angeles."
These dead
forests represent an almost apocalyptic hazard to more than 100,000 mountain
and foothill residents, many of whom depend on a single, narrow road for their
fire escape. Earlier this year, San Bernardino county officials, despairing of
the ability to evacuate all their mountain hamlets by highway, proposed a
bizarre last-ditch plan to huddle residents on boats in the middle of Arrowhead
and Big Bear lakes.
Now the San
Bernardinos are an inferno, along with tens of thousand acres of
chaparral-covered hillsides in neighboring counties. As always during Halloween
fire seasons, there is hysteria about arson. Invisible hands may have purposely
ignited several of the current firestorms. Indeed, in Santa Ana weather like
this, one maniac on a motorcycle with a cigarette lighter can burn down half
the world.
This is a specter against
which grand inquisitors and wars against terrorism are powerless to protect us.
Moreover, many fire scientists dismiss "ignition" -- whether natural,
accidental, or deliberate -- as a relatively trivial factor in their equations.
They study wildfire as an inevitable result of the accumulation of fuel mass.
Given fuel, "fire happens."
The best
preventive measure, of course, is to return to the native-Californian practice
of regular, small-scale burning of old brush and chaparral. This is now
textbook policy, but the suburbanization of the fire terrain makes it almost
impossible to implement it on any adequate scale. Homeowners despise the
temporary pollution of "controlled burns" and local officials fear the legal
consequences of escaped fires.
As a
result, huge plantations of old, highly flammable brush accumulate along the
peripheries and in the interstices of new, sprawled-out suburbs. Since the
devastating 1993 fires, tens of thousands of new homes have pushed their way
into the furthest recesses of Southern California's coastal and inland
fire-belts. Each new homeowner, moreover, expects heroic levels of protection
from underfunded county and state fire
agencies.
Fire, as a result, is
politically ironic. Right now, as I watch San Diego's wealthiest new suburb,
Scripps Ranch, in flames, I recall the Schwarzenegger fund-raising parties
hosted there a few weeks ago. This was an epicenter of the recent recall and
gilded voices roared to the skies against the oppression of an out-of-control
public sector. Now Arnold's wealthy supporters are screaming for fire engines,
and "big government" is the only thing standing between their $3 million homes
and the ash pile.
Halloween fires, of
course, burn shacks as well as mansions, but Republicans tend to
disproportionately concentrate themselves in the wrong altitudes and ecologies.
Indeed it is striking to what extent the current fire map (Rancho Cucamonga,
north Fontana, La Verne, Simi Valley, Vista, Ramona, Eucalyptus Hills, Scripps
Ranch, and so on) recapitulates geographic patterns of heaviest voter support
for the recall.
The fires also cruelly
illuminate the new governor's essential dilemma: how to service simultaneous
middle-class demands for reduced spending and more public services. The
white-flight gated suburbs insist on impossible standards of fire protection,
but refuse to pay either higher insurance premiums (fire insurance in
California is "cross-subsidized" by all homeowners) or higher property taxes.
Even a Hollywood superhero will have difficulty squaring that
circle.
Mike Davis is the
author of City of Quartz, Ecology of Fear, and most recently, Dead Cities: and
Other Tales. Printed courtesy of Mike Davis and
<www.tomdispatch.com>.
Posted: Sat
- November 1, 2003 at 05:17 PM