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California Caught Off Guard By Massive Fires After LA Fire Dept Spent Years Pushing ‘Racial Equity’

RicoSuave102954

HB Heisman
Jul 17, 2023
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The Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) committed significant resources to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives before the outbreak of massive fires that devastated the Los Angeles area overnight.

The LAFD has implemented an internal “racial equity plan,” subjected employees to diversity training and is currently led by Chief Kristin Crowley, “the first female and LGBTQ Fire Chief in the LAFD” and a staunch supporter of the initiatives. As strong winds fed the wildfires on Tuesday evening, former Republican Los Angeles mayoral candidate Rick Caruso reported that some fire hydrants were running low on water as the department scrambled to mobilize firefighters.

The department’s racial equity plan, adopted in 2021, asserts that the LAFD is a better firefighting organization for focusing on the demographic characteristics of its personnel.

“The strength of any organization rests in its greatest resource—its people; and LAFD leadership cannot accomplish any of the racial equity and inclusion goals without the employees to accomplish the work and embrace the vision while being guided by competent leadership,” the LAFD racial equity plan states. “It has been concluded and realized that the more talent, skills, perspectives, insight, knowledge, and abilities acquired through racial equity and inclusion, the stronger and more effective and competitive the organization has become.”

The LAFD evidently did not have adequate personnel on hand to mount an immediate and sufficient response to the devastating fires, indicated by the rare Tuesday night call to off-duty firefighters to report their availability. Some forecasts, including those issued by the National Interagency Fire Center and the California Office for Emergency Services, warned that Southern California was at high risk for serious fires before Tuesday’s events.

In a brief with the news media Wednesday morning, officials said that the fires have claimed more than 1,000 buildings and caused serious injuries for civilians who did not evacuate hard-hit areas in time.

Shortly after taking over the top job at LAFD in 2022, Crowley made clear in a local news segment that one of her top priorities would be increasing the department’s diversity. In the interview, she suggested she does not look to meet specific demographic quotas in the department because there is “never enough” diversity.

Los Angeles County also posted an October 2024 video touting a one-day DEI planning event hosted by the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative, during which county leaders worked on ideas and plans to “realize a just and equitable LA County for all residents and all communities.”
An official county website detailing its work with the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative states that the county “seeks to end structural racism and its consequences by working closely with all County departments, commissions, agencies, and advisory bodies to collaborate with all cities, unincorporated communities, school districts, state and federal agencies, community-based organizations, philanthropy and academic institutions.”

As of Wednesday afternoon, the fires were still out of control, consuming thousands of acres of land with the help of powerful wind gusts that have yet to subside.

The LAFD did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.



As Los Angeles burns to the ground and its citizens suffer you can sleep better knowing DEI played a large part in this tragedy.





 
The Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) committed significant resources to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives before the outbreak of massive fires that devastated the Los Angeles area overnight.

The LAFD has implemented an internal “racial equity plan,” subjected employees to diversity training and is currently led by Chief Kristin Crowley, “the first female and LGBTQ Fire Chief in the LAFD” and a staunch supporter of the initiatives. As strong winds fed the wildfires on Tuesday evening, former Republican Los Angeles mayoral candidate Rick Caruso reported that some fire hydrants were running low on water as the department scrambled to mobilize firefighters.

The department’s racial equity plan, adopted in 2021, asserts that the LAFD is a better firefighting organization for focusing on the demographic characteristics of its personnel.

“The strength of any organization rests in its greatest resource—its people; and LAFD leadership cannot accomplish any of the racial equity and inclusion goals without the employees to accomplish the work and embrace the vision while being guided by competent leadership,” the LAFD racial equity plan states. “It has been concluded and realized that the more talent, skills, perspectives, insight, knowledge, and abilities acquired through racial equity and inclusion, the stronger and more effective and competitive the organization has become.”

The LAFD evidently did not have adequate personnel on hand to mount an immediate and sufficient response to the devastating fires, indicated by the rare Tuesday night call to off-duty firefighters to report their availability. Some forecasts, including those issued by the National Interagency Fire Center and the California Office for Emergency Services, warned that Southern California was at high risk for serious fires before Tuesday’s events.

In a brief with the news media Wednesday morning, officials said that the fires have claimed more than 1,000 buildings and caused serious injuries for civilians who did not evacuate hard-hit areas in time.

Shortly after taking over the top job at LAFD in 2022, Crowley made clear in a local news segment that one of her top priorities would be increasing the department’s diversity. In the interview, she suggested she does not look to meet specific demographic quotas in the department because there is “never enough” diversity.

Los Angeles County also posted an October 2024 video touting a one-day DEI planning event hosted by the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative, during which county leaders worked on ideas and plans to “realize a just and equitable LA County for all residents and all communities.”
An official county website detailing its work with the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative states that the county “seeks to end structural racism and its consequences by working closely with all County departments, commissions, agencies, and advisory bodies to collaborate with all cities, unincorporated communities, school districts, state and federal agencies, community-based organizations, philanthropy and academic institutions.”

As of Wednesday afternoon, the fires were still out of control, consuming thousands of acres of land with the help of powerful wind gusts that have yet to subside.

The LAFD did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.



As Los Angeles burns to the ground and its citizens suffer you can sleep better knowing DEI played a large part in this tragedy.
:rolleyes:
 
The Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) committed significant resources to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives before the outbreak of massive fires that devastated the Los Angeles area overnight.

The LAFD has implemented an internal “racial equity plan,” subjected employees to diversity training and is currently led by Chief Kristin Crowley, “the first female and LGBTQ Fire Chief in the LAFD” and a staunch supporter of the initiatives. As strong winds fed the wildfires on Tuesday evening, former Republican Los Angeles mayoral candidate Rick Caruso reported that some fire hydrants were running low on water as the department scrambled to mobilize firefighters.

The department’s racial equity plan, adopted in 2021, asserts that the LAFD is a better firefighting organization for focusing on the demographic characteristics of its personnel.

“The strength of any organization rests in its greatest resource—its people; and LAFD leadership cannot accomplish any of the racial equity and inclusion goals without the employees to accomplish the work and embrace the vision while being guided by competent leadership,” the LAFD racial equity plan states. “It has been concluded and realized that the more talent, skills, perspectives, insight, knowledge, and abilities acquired through racial equity and inclusion, the stronger and more effective and competitive the organization has become.”

The LAFD evidently did not have adequate personnel on hand to mount an immediate and sufficient response to the devastating fires, indicated by the rare Tuesday night call to off-duty firefighters to report their availability. Some forecasts, including those issued by the National Interagency Fire Center and the California Office for Emergency Services, warned that Southern California was at high risk for serious fires before Tuesday’s events.

In a brief with the news media Wednesday morning, officials said that the fires have claimed more than 1,000 buildings and caused serious injuries for civilians who did not evacuate hard-hit areas in time.

Shortly after taking over the top job at LAFD in 2022, Crowley made clear in a local news segment that one of her top priorities would be increasing the department’s diversity. In the interview, she suggested she does not look to meet specific demographic quotas in the department because there is “never enough” diversity.

Los Angeles County also posted an October 2024 video touting a one-day DEI planning event hosted by the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative, during which county leaders worked on ideas and plans to “realize a just and equitable LA County for all residents and all communities.”
An official county website detailing its work with the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative states that the county “seeks to end structural racism and its consequences by working closely with all County departments, commissions, agencies, and advisory bodies to collaborate with all cities, unincorporated communities, school districts, state and federal agencies, community-based organizations, philanthropy and academic institutions.”

As of Wednesday afternoon, the fires were still out of control, consuming thousands of acres of land with the help of powerful wind gusts that have yet to subside.

The LAFD did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.



As Los Angeles burns to the ground and its citizens suffer you can sleep better knowing DEI played a large part in this tragedy.
Oh, good grief. The idea that LAFD’s diversity and equity efforts caused issues with wildfire response is comical. Wildfires in California are driven by things like climate change, extended drought, and high winds, none of which have anything to do with DEI programs. Your claim about low water pressure is also BS—water management is handled by local infrastructure, not the fire department. Calls to off-duty firefighters during emergencies are standard practice for large-scale fires, not a lack of preparedness.

The focus on Chief Kristin Crowley’s gender and LGBTQ identity is irrelevant to her qualifications or the department’s ability to manage emergencies. California’s real wildfire challenges stem from resource limitations, outdated infrastructure, and the growing frequency of extreme weather events (but it's snowing in America, so this can't be true).
 
Oh, good grief. The idea that LAFD’s diversity and equity efforts caused issues with wildfire response is comical. Wildfires in California are driven by things like climate change, extended drought, and high winds, none of which have anything to do with DEI programs. Your claim about low water pressure is also BS—water management is handled by local infrastructure, not the fire department. Calls to off-duty firefighters during emergencies are standard practice for large-scale fires, not a lack of preparedness.

The focus on Chief Kristin Crowley’s gender and LGBTQ identity is irrelevant to her qualifications or the department’s ability to manage emergencies. California’s real wildfire challenges stem from resource limitations, outdated infrastructure, and the growing frequency of extreme weather events (but it's snowing in America, so this can't be true).
The old climate change fall back excuse is alive in the minds of simpletons like alaskanseminole, lack of being prepared is evident in this disaster in California. Cutting money from public safety and then spending many times that on green initiatives is also evident in this disaster. Promoting someone to a position that others were more qualified for because the promoted person was a fruit loop is quite evident here.

Californians are victims of their own liberal policies.
 
The old climate change fall back excuse is alive in the minds of simpletons like alaskanseminole, lack of being prepared is evident in this disaster in California. Cutting money from public safety and then spending it on green initiatives is also evident in this disaster. Promoting someone to a position that others were more qualified for because the promoted person was a fruit loop is quite evident here.

Californians are victims of their own liberal policies.
Do you ever bring ANY facts to a conversation or just FoxNews sound bites? You come across as nothing more than a MAGA puppet. Again, the wildfires in California are happening due to a combination of factors, including climate change (why do you hate science?), natural weather patterns, and land management practices. Prolonged droughts, extreme heat, and strong winds—conditions increasingly linked to climate change—are significant contributors to the frequency and intensity of these fires.

As for funding, California allocates substantial resources to wildfire prevention and emergency response. In 2023, the state invested $2.7 billion in wildfire prevention and suppression efforts, one of the largest commitments of its kind. Chief Kristin Crowley, who leads the LAFD, is a 22-year veteran with extensive qualifications, including command experience and overseeing fire prevention programs. Why do you care who she bumps uglies with?
 
Do you ever bring ANY facts to a conversation or just FoxNews sound bites? You come across as nothing more than a MAGA puppet. Again, the wildfires in California are happening due to a combination of factors, including climate change (why do you hate science?), natural weather patterns, and land management practices. Prolonged droughts, extreme heat, and strong winds—conditions increasingly linked to climate change—are significant contributors to the frequency and intensity of these fires.

As for funding, California allocates substantial resources to wildfire prevention and emergency response. In 2023, the state invested $2.7 billion in wildfire prevention and suppression efforts, one of the largest commitments of its kind. Chief Kristin Crowley, who leads the LAFD, is a 22-year veteran with extensive qualifications, including command experience and overseeing fire prevention programs. Why do you care who she bumps uglies with?
Californians are victims of their own liberal policies.
 
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Rico, those two things have nothing to do with each other. Unless your head's in the sand public safety budgets all across the country have been getting cut or have not received the increases they deserve for years now.
 
I doubt that there are many outside of this board who might disagree.
Depends on the particular policy and outcomes. It shouldn't be a blanket statement.

Otherwise it's just a live version of this:

200w.gif
 
So, you've demonstrated for us that:

  • You cannot point to a single policy
  • You cannot correctly spell "policies"
Wanna go for the trifecta of idiocy on your next post?
Californians got what they voted for, the last election showed that Americans outside of California/New York have given up on the Democrats liberal agenda and voted for Conservatives. California will follow that route after this debacle created by the liberal agendas.
 
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The Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) committed significant resources to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives before the outbreak of massive fires that devastated the Los Angeles area overnight.

The LAFD has implemented an internal “racial equity plan,” subjected employees to diversity training and is currently led by Chief Kristin Crowley, “the first female and LGBTQ Fire Chief in the LAFD” and a staunch supporter of the initiatives. As strong winds fed the wildfires on Tuesday evening, former Republican Los Angeles mayoral candidate Rick Caruso reported that some fire hydrants were running low on water as the department scrambled to mobilize firefighters.

The department’s racial equity plan, adopted in 2021, asserts that the LAFD is a better firefighting organization for focusing on the demographic characteristics of its personnel.

“The strength of any organization rests in its greatest resource—its people; and LAFD leadership cannot accomplish any of the racial equity and inclusion goals without the employees to accomplish the work and embrace the vision while being guided by competent leadership,” the LAFD racial equity plan states. “It has been concluded and realized that the more talent, skills, perspectives, insight, knowledge, and abilities acquired through racial equity and inclusion, the stronger and more effective and competitive the organization has become.”

The LAFD evidently did not have adequate personnel on hand to mount an immediate and sufficient response to the devastating fires, indicated by the rare Tuesday night call to off-duty firefighters to report their availability. Some forecasts, including those issued by the National Interagency Fire Center and the California Office for Emergency Services, warned that Southern California was at high risk for serious fires before Tuesday’s events.

In a brief with the news media Wednesday morning, officials said that the fires have claimed more than 1,000 buildings and caused serious injuries for civilians who did not evacuate hard-hit areas in time.

Shortly after taking over the top job at LAFD in 2022, Crowley made clear in a local news segment that one of her top priorities would be increasing the department’s diversity. In the interview, she suggested she does not look to meet specific demographic quotas in the department because there is “never enough” diversity.

Los Angeles County also posted an October 2024 video touting a one-day DEI planning event hosted by the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative, during which county leaders worked on ideas and plans to “realize a just and equitable LA County for all residents and all communities.”
An official county website detailing its work with the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative states that the county “seeks to end structural racism and its consequences by working closely with all County departments, commissions, agencies, and advisory bodies to collaborate with all cities, unincorporated communities, school districts, state and federal agencies, community-based organizations, philanthropy and academic institutions.”

As of Wednesday afternoon, the fires were still out of control, consuming thousands of acres of land with the help of powerful wind gusts that have yet to subside.

The LAFD did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.



As Los Angeles burns to the ground and its citizens suffer you can sleep better knowing DEI played a large part in this tragedy.
People like you are the lowest common denominator among us. Making political hay on a message board while people are dying, some being burnt beyond recognition, while others are losing their homes and everything they've worked for???

F U C K YOU!
 
“Fact Checked”

Just because some one has contrasting understandings of something doesn’t give anyone the right to place their so called “facts” over others.

The facts are that the budget was increased, not decreased.

You can have your own opinions; you cannot simply "make up" your own facts.
 
Do you ever bring ANY facts to a conversation or just FoxNews sound bites? You come across as nothing more than a MAGA puppet. Again, the wildfires in California are happening due to a combination of factors, including climate change (why do you hate science?), natural weather patterns, and land management practices. Prolonged droughts, extreme heat, and strong winds—conditions increasingly linked to climate change—are significant contributors to the frequency and intensity of these fires.

As for funding, California allocates substantial resources to wildfire prevention and emergency response. In 2023, the state invested $2.7 billion in wildfire prevention and suppression efforts, one of the largest commitments of its kind. Chief Kristin Crowley, who leads the LAFD, is a 22-year veteran with extensive qualifications, including command experience and overseeing fire prevention programs. Why do you care who she bumps uglies with?
Why did you list land management practices last? And climate change snuck up on Califas? If you lost your home in this blaze, who would you be upset with?
 
Oh...so they need the same "hurricane machines" the Dems used on FL and NC, then....
Sorry you guys can’t understand the deciders have failed to address the reoccurring wild fire and water shortage…like climate change all of a sudden became the problem. Again, who would you be upset if your house went up in flames here?
 
The Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) committed significant resources to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives before the outbreak of massive fires that devastated the Los Angeles area overnight.

The LAFD has implemented an internal “racial equity plan,” subjected employees to diversity training and is currently led by Chief Kristin Crowley, “the first female and LGBTQ Fire Chief in the LAFD” and a staunch supporter of the initiatives. As strong winds fed the wildfires on Tuesday evening, former Republican Los Angeles mayoral candidate Rick Caruso reported that some fire hydrants were running low on water as the department scrambled to mobilize firefighters.

The department’s racial equity plan, adopted in 2021, asserts that the LAFD is a better firefighting organization for focusing on the demographic characteristics of its personnel.

“The strength of any organization rests in its greatest resource—its people; and LAFD leadership cannot accomplish any of the racial equity and inclusion goals without the employees to accomplish the work and embrace the vision while being guided by competent leadership,” the LAFD racial equity plan states. “It has been concluded and realized that the more talent, skills, perspectives, insight, knowledge, and abilities acquired through racial equity and inclusion, the stronger and more effective and competitive the organization has become.”

The LAFD evidently did not have adequate personnel on hand to mount an immediate and sufficient response to the devastating fires, indicated by the rare Tuesday night call to off-duty firefighters to report their availability. Some forecasts, including those issued by the National Interagency Fire Center and the California Office for Emergency Services, warned that Southern California was at high risk for serious fires before Tuesday’s events.

In a brief with the news media Wednesday morning, officials said that the fires have claimed more than 1,000 buildings and caused serious injuries for civilians who did not evacuate hard-hit areas in time.

Shortly after taking over the top job at LAFD in 2022, Crowley made clear in a local news segment that one of her top priorities would be increasing the department’s diversity. In the interview, she suggested she does not look to meet specific demographic quotas in the department because there is “never enough” diversity.

Los Angeles County also posted an October 2024 video touting a one-day DEI planning event hosted by the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative, during which county leaders worked on ideas and plans to “realize a just and equitable LA County for all residents and all communities.”
An official county website detailing its work with the Anti-Racism, Diversity and Inclusion Initiative states that the county “seeks to end structural racism and its consequences by working closely with all County departments, commissions, agencies, and advisory bodies to collaborate with all cities, unincorporated communities, school districts, state and federal agencies, community-based organizations, philanthropy and academic institutions.”

As of Wednesday afternoon, the fires were still out of control, consuming thousands of acres of land with the help of powerful wind gusts that have yet to subside.

The LAFD did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.



As Los Angeles burns to the ground and its citizens suffer you can sleep better knowing DEI played a large part in this tragedy.
this is a stupid post
 
Forgot water management too
Water management has nothing to do with the LA fires.

Is the system strained. Yes. It's performing at 400 percent of it's capacity because of the gigantic scope of the fire. The issue, as it pertains to water is the inability to attack this fire from the sky with tankers and helicopters. Because the winds are blowing more than 40 mph, they can't utilize those tools. Plenty of water in the pacific ocean. They just can't get to it. Once these winds die down, containment will be rapid.
 
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Sorry you guys can’t understand

Can't understand what?

Do you understand what a "drought" is?
Do you understand that, typically, Santa Ana winds occur in early/mid fall BEFORE everything is even more dried out over the winter in that area?

I lived in SoCal for ~10 years. When did you live out there to gather your "understanding" of the climate out there?
 
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