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		<title>Rednecks, Wetbacks and Flames in Rural San Diego</title>
		<link>http://rocky4mayor.wordpress.com/2007/10/26/rednecks-wetbacks-and-flames-in-rural-san-diego/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2007 05:47:48 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[San Diego County Fires]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[By Rocky Neptun
Jamul, California. Oct. 23, 2007. The crackling
and  popping of exploding brush mixed with the hissing
sounds of quick burning dry  grasses, growing ever
louder as we stood on the ridge.
Waves of thick,  dirty smoke pushed down the
opposite slopes in jerks as the flames headed  over the
crest, sucking the winds inward for [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=rocky4mayor.wordpress.com&blog=1530768&post=5&subd=rocky4mayor&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>By Rocky Neptun</p>
<p>Jamul, California. Oct. 23, 2007. The crackling<br />
and  popping of exploding brush mixed with the hissing<br />
sounds of quick burning dry  grasses, growing ever<br />
louder as we stood on the ridge.</p>
<p>Waves of thick,  dirty smoke pushed down the<br />
opposite slopes in jerks as the flames headed  over the<br />
crest, sucking the winds inward for combustion and<br />
outward as  burning energy. Embers flew over our heads<br />
like flaming birds. Dead, hardened  Indian rice grass<br />
and San Felipe dogweed flipped the flames upward  into<br />
the chaparral, most of which is over 50 years old,<br />
mummified wood,  prone to burn extremely hot.</p>
<p>Brad Everson, who&#8217;s family complex near  Jamul was<br />
threatened several times in the two days since the<br />
fire began,  had driven me up the winding two-lane road<br />
called Skyline Truck Trail about  10 miles to a vista<br />
point overlooking a valley. We watched the flames  rush<br />
down the slope, disappearing under a blanket of leaves<br />
and branches  in a parched creek bed. There was an<br />
eerie silence for less than a minute,  then a kind of<br />
rustle, followed by a thunder-like explosion and the<br />
flames  continued up the slope toward us. We drove away<br />
quickly.</p>
<p>It was  Tuesday and Everson hadn&#8217;t seen a single<br />
firefighter since the fire began on  Sunday. Fueled by<br />
the strongest Santa Ana winds in decades and  drought<br />
conditions throughout the Southern California region,<br />
the blaze  near Jamul (called the Harris fire) was one<br />
of two major firestorms in San  Diego County. The<br />
other, the Witch Creek fire, also began on  Sunday,<br />
whipped by the ferocious winds, was spreading across a<br />
swath of  swanky homes and estates in North County.</p>
<p>As we peered through layers of  dense smoke,<br />
Everson, a handyman and carpenter, showed me around<br />
the  family compound he had built with his own hands on<br />
10 acres of a bluff on the  south side of a hill,<br />
looking across the unmarked border into Mexico.  Off,<br />
in the distance, there was an occasional bang as<br />
propane tanks  exploded.</p>
<p>Everson, this day, surrounded by conflagration,<br />
would find  personal transformation as he inched toward<br />
a radical perspective. He had a  radio that intercepted<br />
police and fire rescue communications and had  known<br />
that Sunday and most of Monday, the high winds had<br />
kept helicopters  and the giant air tankers grounded.<br />
Yet, this morning, finally in the air,  these crews<br />
were being sent north to save luxury estates and<br />
mansions in  the Rancho Santa Fe area (median household<br />
income &#8211; $194,000) and the  community of Fairbanks<br />
Ranch (median income &#8211; $174,000); while his  East<br />
County neighbors hovered around a meager income of<br />
$50,000 a  year.</p>
<p>County Supervisors Profit from Dangerous  Fire<br />
Conditions</p>
<p>Everson told me that the San Diego  County<br />
Supervisors, whom he had supported in the past, was a<br />
group of  right-wing, Republican politicians, elected<br />
year-after-year (for decades,  with no term limits) by<br />
developer and building association campaign  dollars.<br />
&#8220;Dianne Jacobs, from East County, and Bill Horn, who<br />
represents  North County, are particularly owned by<br />
land and housing development  speculators,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>&#8220;Not only did the San Diego Supervisors help  defeat<br />
the 2004 Rural Lands Initiative, which I mistakenly<br />
opposed,&#8221; he  said, &#8220;but in in 1995 they had illegally<br />
zoned 191,000 acres of cultivated  and rangeland<br />
preserves in 8-acre minimums, opening these rural<br />
areas to  housing tract development.</p>
<p>&#8220;After the devastating Cedar and Paradise  fires in<br />
2003, I realized that the environmentalists were<br />
right. Without  growth limits, suburban sprawl will<br />
continue out into the brush, putting more  and more<br />
people in harm&#8217;s way,&#8221; Everson said.</p>
<p>The rural Lands  Initiative would have created<br />
growth-limit circles around cities and  unincorporated<br />
towns in San Diego County. The Building  Industry<br />
Association and the San Diego Association of Realtors,<br />
with the  aid of the Board of Supervisors, spent over<br />
$2.5 million in a campaign of  lies and confusion.<br />
After the ballot measure was defeated, developers  have<br />
raked in billions grading away back country acres;<br />
while Supervisors  stash the cash for subdivision<br />
decisions.</p>
<p>&#8220;Not only have the  Supervisors allowed this inane<br />
pattern of scattered estate lots,&#8221; Everson  mentioned,<br />
&#8220;they are so conditioned by those with wealth against<br />
taxes  that they have failed to develop a solid,<br />
effective county fire fighting  department.</p>
<p>In the County there are 28 fire protection agencies<br />
and 7  volunteer departments that serve 3,572 square<br />
miles. Approximately $49.4  million of the $57.9<br />
million annual budget for unincorporated fire  agencies<br />
is from property tax revenue, with the remaining<br />
funding coming  from $8.3 million in special<br />
assessments and $200,000 in fund raising by  volunteer<br />
departments. Some districts are underfunded or lack<br />
adequate  staff or equipment . The East County Fire<br />
Protection District which serves  about 13,000<br />
residents in Crest and Bostonia, with a $1.4 million<br />
annual  budget, and has been struggling to overcome<br />
financial problems that may force  it to close.<br />
Everson told me it is time for the Board of<br />
Supervisors to  take some responsibility and spend the<br />
money necessary for a full-fledged  fire department,<br />
with permanent fire stations, fully staffed and<br />
equipped,  including air resources. Also, he said, they<br />
must &#8220;nip the hand that feeds,&#8221;  oppose the building<br />
industry and limit suburban growth in rural San  Diego<br />
County.</p>
<p>Will These Firestorms Allow People to Recognize  Our<br />
Broken-ness?</p>
<p>Global Warming. With four fire-related deaths  and<br />
the destruction of over 1,300 homes and other<br />
buildings (and 300,000  acres scorched); will the<br />
politicians and corporate-owned media finally take  a<br />
sober look at global warming. Everyone knows that we<br />
have had relatively  low amounts of rain during most of<br />
the past four years; with record breaking  heat spells<br />
that dehydrate vegetation and desiccate entire<br />
eco-systems. As  an article in the August edition of<br />
Scientific American pointed out, our fire  seasons are<br />
growing longer each year, with spring snow melts<br />
occurring  earlier each year.</p>
<p>Also, to add to Southern California woes, it  is<br />
possible that the dry, westward Santa Ana winds that<br />
blow in from  across the Mojave Desert are intensifying<br />
each year, including not calming  down at night as<br />
usual, because of global warming.<br />
When will we demand  that all political and economic<br />
decisions have a global warming mitigation  component?<br />
How many more lives, property destroyed, lives<br />
disrupted, will  it take before we acknowledge<br />
ourselves as energy addicts? As AA teaches, we  must<br />
first admit our addiction before we can begin the<br />
10-step  process.</p>
<p>Homelessness. Half a million people were<br />
displaced by the  fires; forced to seek shelter in<br />
unusual places, including Qualcomm Stadium,  where the<br />
profit-driven Chargers management forced people onto<br />
hard floors  in stuffy, poorly ventilated hallways<br />
because they did not want to allow  tents on their<br />
grass. Will there be a mellowing of the fear and<br />
revulsion  against the un-housed? An understanding, a<br />
shared empathy that things happen  over which we have<br />
no control? A sense that bad things sometimes happen<br />
to  good people &#8211; and without resources or family<br />
members, to climb up and out  could be a daunting task?</p>
<p>As the San Diego City Council does it&#8217;s usual  dance<br />
around the NIMBY&#8217;s over the winter shelter, hoping the<br />
Mayor&#8217;s  re-election will give him the political<br />
courage to torch the whole project;  will some of this<br />
week&#8217;s displaced come forth asking for a permanent<br />
city  shelter?</p>
<p>Migrants. Several hours before he met me at the<br />
local  Catholic Church in Jumal; Brad Everson, was<br />
returning from taking is  92-year-old mother to a<br />
friends house in La Mesa, when he discovered a  family<br />
of undocumented migrants in his barn. Several of the<br />
children had  slight burns and they were hungry.</p>
<p>Everson had already hidden from the  Border Patrol<br />
earlier. Yesterday, they had driven by his property<br />
and  yelled over the gate for him to evacuate; so early<br />
this morning when another  unit passed, he ran to the<br />
barn to hide.</p>
<p>He had heard on the radio  that one border crosser<br />
had died and six others, from central and  southern<br />
Mexico, had been hospitalized with burn injuries.<br />
Everson, who at  one time had been a supporter of the<br />
California Minutemen, even allowing them  to camp on<br />
his property, inquired about my sympathies and<br />
political views  before allowing me to help translate.</p>
<p>He told me that almost losing his  life&#8217;s work &#8211; his<br />
home, his mother&#8217;s and his brother&#8217;s &#8211; gave him a  new<br />
perspective about migration and borders. &#8220;If I had<br />
lost all this  today, with my crummy insurance,&#8221; he<br />
said, waving his arm expansively, &#8220;I  would have had to<br />
start at the bottom again.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all these simple  people want &#8211; a good,<br />
safe, decent life for their families,&#8221; he  sighed,<br />
lifting his Rosary out of his shirt pocket, &#8220;God<br />
looked after me  today, and I will help these people.&#8221;<br />
He urged me to come on Saturday,  pointing to a camper<br />
shell that would fit on my pick-up. &#8220;You say they  have<br />
relatives in Indio&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8221;</p>
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