CLIMATE ACTION PLANS ACTIVATED – Butte County – Climate Action Plan – Town of Paradise

https://www.buttecounty.net/dds/Planning/General-Plan/CAP

EXCERPT:

Adopted February 25, 2014

Introduction to Butte County

Located in Northern California, unincorporated Butte County contains approximately 1,680 square miles within the northeastern end of the Sacramento Valley, extending east into the northern Sierra Nevada foothills. Butte County is predominantly a rural area; urban land makes up less than 5% of the total county area. Weather is generally temperate and warm, with average lows dropping to just below 40 degrees Fahrenheit and summer highs ranging over 90 degrees Fahrenheit.1

Homes and businesses are dispersed throughout the unincorporated county, resulting in transportation activity typical for a rural, unincorporated county. Given the distribution of homes, businesses, and daily activities, driving in personal vehicles is common. Most of the building stock was constructed before adoption of California’s energy-efficient Title 24 building code in 1978. Similar to other rural counties, Butte County does not require a business license or maintain extensive building stock records.

Agriculture is a strong and growing sector of the Butte County economy, and occupied about 500,000 acres of unincorporated county land in 2012. According to the Agriculture Commission office, gross Butte County 2012 agricultural production totaled $721,434,000, an increase of over $77.3 million above 2011, and approximately 45% above the county’s 10-year average.2 Walnuts, almonds, and rice crops were among the highest-value crop types. Generally, agricultural activity has been shifting from field crops to higher-value nut crops that typically require less water and fertilizer. Agricultural businesses have taken steps to reduce costs and improve yields by reducing water and fertilizer use, both of which have GHG emissions reduction benefits. Agricultural innovation is a key foundation of the County’s economic strategy, and is also important to the success of the CAP.

Where this Plan Applies

The CAP provides GHG emissions reduction targets for both the unincorporated Butte County community, and for Butte County government operations. Figure 1 identifies the jurisdictional boundary of Butte County, which includes the cities of Biggs, Chico, Gridley, and Oroville, and the Town of Paradise. Butte County provides many services on a countywide basis, but has land use authority only over the unincorporated area, which is the focus of the CAP. The term “community” is used to refer to the unincorporated area.

Camp Fire Smart Meters a

Gotta get the word out, I know that we need to document. I don’t have the best software to do any real analysis, but I am giving the best descriptions I have. I am attaching pics of 14 properties that have minimal damage, that either included the smart meter and/or some other anomaly(s) to prove that this is an operation, not caused by wild fire.

Camp Fire

Only 4 properties are in this email, but they seem to show significance. This is so messed up to the people in Paradise/Concow/Magalia, etc. And if we can document proof (I’m not public nor do I have a following) if it turns out that we can stop this, I am soooooo anxious to help. This has hurt my family and so many other innocent people. I need to do something. Thanks.

NO MORE INSURANCE? How Wildfires Are Making Some California Homes Uninsurable – The New York Times

California’s wildfires keep growing bigger, more frequent and more destructive. Of the 20 worst wildfires in state history, four were just last year, giving rise to a record $12.6 billion of insurance claims.

It hasn’t gotten any better this year. The Mendocino Complex Fire in August was the biggest in state history, and the Camp Fire that wiped out the town of Paradise is the deadliest. It had destroyed nearly 12,000 homesas of Monday morning.

This has put pressure on property insurers, some of which have been declining to renew homeowners’ policies in fire-prone areas. When the houses that burned this year are rebuilt, their owners may find that no one is writing insurance there — at least not at affordable prices.

“We’re not in a crisis yet, but all of the trends are in a bad direction,” said Dave Jones, who is completing his eighth and final year as California’s insurance commissioner. “We’re slowly marching toward a world that’s uninsurable.”

FULL STORY HERE

FIRE CONSPIRACIES: CA wildfire conspiracy theories in 2017 & 2018 fires | Camp Fire | The Sacramento Bee

This is meant to show how the MSM put the info right out there, but calls it crazy.

https://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/fires/article221651030.html

Illuminati, government, lasers: California fire conspiracy theories are wild — and wildly implausible

There’s little to no evidence to support most of their claims, but that doesn’t stop blogs, forums, YouTube channels and other outlets from sharing sensational conspiracy-theorist explanations in the aftermath of tragedy.

Venture down the wrong path of Google or Wikipedia searches and you may find yourself in the thick of some alternative explanations for California’s deadly wildfires. Very, very alternative explanations.

Here’s just a sampling, most of them relating to last year’s fires. For reasons relating to their credibility, we won’t link directly to stories making claims of questionable veracity, but all theories listed below have been shared online by at least two different conspiracy enthusiast outlets. (Surf the web at your own risk.)

  • A number of theories emerged following last year’s fires claiming that the burn patterns seen in some photos could only be explained by targeted lasers, which must have been operated by terrorist groups, the U.S. government, aliens or some other agitated party. These lasers, supposedly, were shot at California from either planes or spaceships, perhaps unmanned drones, for reasons that were not entirely clear.
  • Some have claimed that California’s recent wildfires were planned efforts by clandestine groups, such as the Illuminati or the New World Order, either as a show of force or in an effort to distract the mainstream media. A few websites claim the lasers from the above conspiracy theory are an Illuminati product.
  • Extrapolating from reports that the 2017 wildfires destroyed expansive marijuana farms, some alternative news websites claimed (with little evidence) that drug cartels from Mexico or South America may have played a role in sparking some of the blazes.

Let’s quickly move on to the part where we debunk most of these claims.

Cal Fire has not yet determined the cause for the Tubbs Fire, which reportedly killed 24 people, but the state agency did determine a cause for most of them: 16 other Northern California fires last year were found to have been linked with Pacific Gas and Electric Co. (PG&E) equipment, including sagging power lines.

No Cal Fire investigation has shown any indication that drug cartels, Illuminati or aliens played any role in sparking or spreading last year’s deadly blazes, or any other wildfire in state history of significant size or destruction.

As for the lasers, conspiracy theorists had asked: How could it be that while some houses burned, the surrounding grass and foliage appeared perfectly fine? It must be the work of trillion-plus-watt laser beams raining down from the heavens, those theories said, linking to photos shared on the news.

But as Science Alert reported last December, there’s no evidence that this is the case, or that “direct energy” weapons have ever been used to start a wildfire. Science Alert further explained, with the help of biologists, that those strange patterns could be explained by the erratic natures of fire and wind, as well as moisture on wood preventing some spots from burning.

In other words, none of these out-there theories related to 2017 or 2018 wildfires has been proven true in any way.

Of note, though, some media outlets have described a suspect arrested this year for allegedly igniting a large wildfire as an “avid” conspiracy theorist.

Forrest Gordon Clark, 51, is accused of starting a 23,000-acre wildfire, called the Holy Fire, near a cabin in Orange County.

“His Facebook page is littered with links to popular conspiracy theories,” including ones related to the 9/11 terror attacks and the October 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Clark is scheduled to appear in court Nov. 28.

Wildfire conspiracy theories did not begin last year, but after the October 2017 and December wildfires ravaged the state, an uptick in creative backstories for destructive and deadly wildfires could be observed. A graph via Google Trends shows search traffic for the phrase “California wildfire conspiracy” peaked in the first two weeks of January 2018.

The phrase went virtually unsearched in the four years prior. The early stages of new conspiracies, ranging from the political to the scientific to just plain weird, have already sprouted again as the Camp Fire continues to burn in Butte County.

They may be even riper for theories this time around, as some celebrities have lost their Southern California homes to the Woolsey and Hill fires that ripped Ventura County, including Malibu.

Read the internet with caution.