California – Trump Tours Paradise Area, Calls Wildfire A ‘Really Bad One’

    10

    President Donald Trump talks with from left, Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom, California Gov. Jerry Brown, Paradise Mayor Jody Jones and FEMA Administrator Brock Longduring a visit to a neighborhood destroyed by the wildfires, Saturday, Nov. 17, 2018, in Paradise, Calif. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)California – From the ashes of a mobile home and RV park, President Donald Trump said Saturday he came to the heart of California’s killer wildfire to fully grasp the scale of the desolation wrought on the landscape.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    “We’re going to have to work quickly. … Hopefully this is going to be the last of these because this was a really, really bad one,” said the president, standing amid the crumpled foundations of homes and twisted steel of melted cars.

    “I think everybody’s seen the light and I don’t think we’ll have this again to this extent,” Trump said in Paradise, the town largely destroyed by a wildfire ignited Nov. 8 that he called “this monster.”

    With that bold and perhaps unlikely prediction, Trump pledged that improved forest management practices will diminish future risks. The declaration evoked his initial tweeted reaction to the fire, the worst in the state’s history, in which he seemed to blame local officials and threatened to take away federal funding.

    When asked if seeing the historic devastation, which stretched for miles and left neighborhoods destroyed and fields scorched, altered his opinion on climate change, Trump answered, “No.”

    The president has long voiced skepticism about man’s impact on the climate and has been reluctant to assign blame to a warming earth for the increase in the frequency and intensity of natural disasters.

    At least 71 people died across Northern California, and authorities are trying to locate more than 1,000 people, though not all are believed missing. More than 5,500 fire personnel were battling the blaze that covered 228 square miles (590 square kilometers) and was about 50 percent contained, officials said.

    For Trump, it was a day to comfort a state grieving from twin tragedies, wildfires in both Northern and Southern California as well as a mass shooting at a popular college bar north of Los Angeles.

    Wearing a camouflage “USA” hat, Trump gazed solemnly at the devastation in Paradise.

    Several burned-out buses and cars were nearby. Trees were burned, their branches bare and twisted. Homes were totally gone; some foundations remained, as did a chimney and, in front of one house, a Mickey Mouse lawn ornament. The fire was reported to have moved through the area at 80 mph.

    “It’s going to work out well, but right now we want to take of the people that are so badly hurt,” Trump said visiting what remained of the Skyway Villa Mobile Home and RV Park. He noted “there are areas you can’t even get to them yet” and the sheer number of people unaccounted for.

    “I think people have to see this really to understand it,” Trump said.

    The president later toured an operation centers, met with response commanders and praised the work of firefighters, law enforcement and representatives of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

    “We’ve never seen anything like this in California,” he said. “It’s total devastation.”

    Trump took a helicopter tour en route to Chico before he toured Paradise. A full cover of haze and the smell of smoke greeted the president upon his arrival at Beale Air Force Base near Sacramento.
    U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a briefing with State officials including Ken Pimlott (R), Director of CAL FIRE, California Governor Jerry Brown, U.S. House Majority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy (L) and Governor-elect Gavin Newsom (2nd L) while visiting the charred wreckage of Skyway Villa Mobile Home and RV Park in Paradise, California, U.S., November 17, 2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis?
    “They’re out there fighting and they’re fighting like hell,” Trump said of the first responders.

    He pledged that Washington would do its part by coming to the Golden State’s aid and urged the House’s Republican leader, Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, a Trump ally and frequent White House visitor, to “come to the office” to help secure the needed funding.

    Trump, who left Washington early Saturday and didn’t expect to return to the White House until well past midnight, planned to travel several hundred miles south to visit with victims of a recent country music bar shooting. A gunman killed a dozen people at the Borderline Bar & Grill in Thousand Oaks on Nov. 7 before committing suicide.

    Trump long has struggled to convey empathy to victims of national disasters and tragedies. His first reaction to the fires came in a tweet last week that drew criticism as unnecessarily critical and tone-deaf given the devastation: “There is no reason for these massive, deadly and costly forest fires in California except that forest management is so poor. Billions of dollars are given each year, with so many lives lost, all because of gross mismanagement of the forests.”

    Nature and humans share blame for the wildfires, but fire scientists are divided as to whether forest management played a major role. Nature provides the dangerous winds that have whipped the fires, the state has been in a drought and human-caused climate change over the long haul is killing and drying the shrubs and trees that provide the fuel.
    U.S. President Donald Trump (2nd L) visits the charred wreckage of Skyway Villa Mobile Home and RV Park with FEMA head Brock Long, Paradise Mayor Jody Jones (R) Governor-elect Gavin Newsom and Governor Jerry Brown (obscured) in Paradise, California, U.S., November 17, 2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis
    He stuck to that theme in his remarks just before departing on Saturday when he outlined what he planned to discuss with Gov. Jerry Brown and Gov-elect Gavin Newsom, both Democrats: “We will be talking about forest management. … The one thing is that everybody now knows that this is what we have to be doing and there’s no question about it. It should have been done many years ago, but I think everybody’s on the right side.”

    Trump, who has long feuded with the political leaders of heavily Democratic California over issues such as immigration and voting, also has threatened to withhold federal payments to the state. After being criticized for his response, Trump has shifted gears, expressing words of encouragement to first responders and those of sympathy for hit victims.

    But when he was asked by Fox News in an interview set to air Sunday whether climate change played a role in the number of serious fires, he said “maybe it contributes a little bit. The big problem we have is management.”

    Brown and Newsom welcomed the president’s visit, with the governor suggesting they set aside political differences since it “now is a time to pull together for the people of California.”

    Brown, a fierce advocate of addressing climate change, did not respond to Trump’s statement that he has not changed his mind on the matter but pointed to several causes and they need to deal with them.

    “If you really look at the facts, from a really open point of view, there are a lot of elements to be considered,” Brown said after Trump spoke. “The president came, he saw and I’m looking forward over the next months and beyond to really understand this threat of fire, the whole matter of drought and all the rest of it. It’s not one thing, it’s a lot of things and I think that if we just open our minds and look at things we’ll get more stuff done.”
    U.S. President Donald Trump looks at a map during a briefing with State officials after visiting the charred wreckage of Skyway Villa Mobile Home and RV Park in Paradise, in Chico, California, U.S., November 17, 2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis?


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    10 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    hashomer
    hashomer
    5 years ago

    Babbling bumbling trumpf used up the 6 adjectives he knows in first 2 minutes there, after insulting and accusing the first responders and forest service, a FEDERAL Agency, last week. What a yutz he is.

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    5 years ago

    I notice he still has not been to Iraq or Afghanistan. He also skipped Arlington.

    yaakov doe
    Member
    yaakov doe
    5 years ago

    Most of the California forests are owned by the Federal government. Trump made some bizarre comments about raking the forest floors to prevent such fires. I’d like to hear him elaborate on this proposal. Perhaps he could re deploy the 5000 soldiers guarding the border to do this task.

    elyeh
    Noble Member
    elyeh
    5 years ago

    Most forestry experts, in National forest management, in academia and in private industry , and in CA, agree that the fire problems are magnified by two things – the lack of controlled burns to rid the forests of underbrush and of many smaller trees, which then become fuel for these gigantic fire,s AND people moving into and living in the midst of the forests where forest fires caused by annual weather conditions are normal.

    As someone who last year lived through a forest fire in CA and was evacuated for several weeks, I know of this first hand. And I know how much resistance to there is among local politicians and the public to the controlled burns that are necessary. The annual forest fires have always been part of the CA condition, long before the US even existed.

    Those who connect this with Trump are just spouting hate and not following Lo Saaneh B’raichah Aid Sheker.

    5 years ago

    There is much better forest management in Finland, which has millions of acres of forests, and one does not read about massive wildfires there. #7 is correct concerning the fact that preventive maintenance should have been performed (controlling the underbrush), to have helped prevent this disaster.

    To our friend Paulin Saudi- Trump has been to Arlington National Cemetery on more than one occasion, especially on Memorial Day. Regarding Iraq or Afghanistan, why should he go there? There are savages who live there, who perpetrate heinous crimes against the civilian population (i.e. suicide bombers, IED’s, etc.).

    Zimri
    Zimri
    5 years ago

    California has a mostly dry Mediterranean climate, Finland is a Nordic country at the same latitude as Siberia, Greenland and Alaska, where temperatures reach -45 F in the winter. Finland has rain most of the year and no drought like California. Finland’s forests are sparsely populated have have lots lakes unlike California.