Zev points finger at Coastal Commission
Malibu:
Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky blamed environmental restrictions for standing in the way of fire protection in the Malibu area.
"The Coastal Commission believes that every piece of chaparral is an environmentally sensitive plant…You’ve got to be realistic. This is the real world," he said.
The Coastal Commission does not prohibit clearing of brush. In fact, under state law since 2005, Californians must clear brush within 100 feet of their homes and other structures -- 200 feet if they live in Los Angeles County’s high-risk areas, including Malibu.
Steve Hudson, the Coastal Commission’s regional supervisor of planning and regulation, said the commission allows vegetation clearance as long as it’s consistent with that law. New developments must have brush-clearance plans approved by the county fire department, he said.
In addition, new developments in the Santa Monica Mountains area that remove chaparral or coastal sage scrub must pay a mitigation fee. The money goes into a fund for preserving the habitats for rare native animals and plants.
-- Marla Cone

Lev is an idiot. It's a desert, it burns and that's normal. If there was more wildlife and fewer homes this wouldn't be such a catastrophe. The real catastrophe is what humans have done to this environment.
Posted by: Patrick | October 22, 2007 at 10:57 PM
Zev is the part of the government -- he is the problem. I can understand why he wants to say someone else is, to take the heat off himself. Perhaps he thinks the mountains shoul be razed and everything black topped. What a great thinker we have governing us.
Posted by: mike | October 23, 2007 at 12:53 PM