FEMA just plain wrong
- Share via
Now that the nation’s attention is gripped by a disaster of epic
proportions in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast -- devastated by a
monster hurricane that may have killed hundreds -- Laguna’s June 1
landslide may look like small potatoes.
But the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s decision last week
to reject disaster assistance based on the 100-year rains of last
winter is still a colossal mistake.
State and federal geologists made their findings clear shortly
after the slide: Rainfall that soaked the area in the first part of
the year -- for which two official disaster declarations were made --
had seeped far down into the ground, collected there, and caused a
100-foot-deep earth movement that made the hillside collapse some
four months later.
In fact, five Bluebird Canyon homes were evacuated in late
February in the Morningside area, after a week of intense rain. This
was probably a precursor to the Flamingo Drive incident that claimed
15 homes and caused the entire canyon to be evacuated.
The connection between rainfall and landslides is abundantly
clear. The El Nino events of the late 1990s resulted in landslides up
and down the state -- and here in Laguna.
Water acts as a lubricant, allowing boulders to slip and earth to
move. Heavy rains can also activate underground rivers that no one is
aware of. Clearly, something like that happened in Bluebird Canyon on
June 1.
How the FEMA officials could ignore their own geologists and
common sense is a mystery.
Laguna was ever so lucky that no lives were lost that day, and
that residents were able to walk out after their homes slid down with
the hillside.
Now, there is much work to do to make the area safe -- not just
for those whose properties were destroyed, but for the hundreds who
live farther up the canyon and need safe passage to and from their
homes.
City officials estimate it will cost $7 million just to get the
hillside in shape to last through the coming rainy season. The
stabilization work “is not optional,” as City Manager Ken Frank says.
City officials were apparently expecting only $1 million from FEMA
to put that emergency plan into effect. But down the road, the money
would have helped finance repairs to the infrastructure to make the
victims whole again and make the area safer for all. The loss of that
money will hurt many city projects and programs. It will have to come
from somewhere.
The agency’s refusal to listen to the experts has put the city --
and the victims -- in a real financial jam and has put a wrinkle in
the city’s ability to get money from the state Office of Emergency
Services, which wants to help.
Both the state and the city are appealing the decision.
FEMA should do the right thing and open its purse strings to help
out -- even if Laguna’s disaster has gone off the national radar.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.