don't wanna go politico - but if every utility lawsuit was paid relative to current extraordinary climate happenstances combined with irresponsible unregulated sprawl itself into hazardous fire areas, the entire State power grid would go broke and defunct, and there would be no realistic funds left to improve it without staggering Fed help. There are tens of thousands of miles of power lines involved, many on steep terrain.
I know all about PG&E and SCE shell game hanky-panky of the past, since they were the primary competing employers down in the canyons themselves, and like all good country folk, their tiny company towns couldn't keep secrets about the big city boss "suits" they despised. But nobody is gonna take the place of those two corporations in terms of more than a hundred years worth of infrastructure development, which includes some of the most remarkable engineering achievements in world history.
Insurance companies are in the business of gambling risk against its probability of occurring. And in really big events, they do stall payment and try to drive hard bargains. I saw all that up close with respect to the Oakland Hills fire and the sheer criminality of two of the several insurance companies involved (and there were some convictions). But in that case too, people still waiting five years for payment while the companies tried to wear them out and haggle them down. But nearly all of that involved really high property loss payouts. It's just gonna keep happening until everyone wakes up to the fact that it's not "business as normal" any longer as far as climate is concerned. We're at the end of a burning rope.
Photographically, I'm an omnivore, and have long done shots of burns - not journalistically - but for sake of the remarkable exotic hues and sheens they produce, and the intense blooms afterwards. My own property had over fifty species of wildflowers on it, up to 32 blooming at once certain Springs.
Across the River canyon, however, gotta be careful about the meth and pot operations, and the combination of meth with white supremacist ideology, as tiny-minority as it is even there. That is the south end of the Sierra narco counties which Brad S. just warned about; and he was not kidding. Not only in the big city, but in the woods too, ya gotta keep your eyes open, know your "neighborhood", and have the common sense to back off is something feels unsafe. I grew up with some of those now dangerous meth deadheads, so know the mantra. They were bad enough when it just rotgut fortified wine which was their ticket.