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Ahead of the 2028 Olympics, Los Angeles launches a program to expand shade across the city
Ahead of the 2028 Olympics, Los Angeles launches a program to expand shade across the city

Los Angeles Times

time01-08-2025

  • Climate
  • Los Angeles Times

Ahead of the 2028 Olympics, Los Angeles launches a program to expand shade across the city

As heat waves grow longer and more intense across Southern California, the absence of shade is becoming a serious public health concern — but vast stretches of Los Angeles remain dangerously exposed. Research shows shaded areas can have a 'heat burden' — a combined measure of temperature, humidity and wind — up to 68–104 degrees less than nearby sun-exposed areas. Quality shade can also reduce UV radiation exposure by up to 75% and help prevent up to 50% of emergency-room visits during heat events. With the 2028 Olympics and other global events set for L.A. on the horizon, a coalition of universities, nonprofits and local agencies has launched ShadeLA, an initiative to expand cooling infrastructure across the city. Led by USC Dornsife Public Exchange — a program that connects researchers with policymakers — and UCLA's Luskin Center for Innovation, the project is focused not only on where shade is needed most, but also on how to build it in ways that last. 'The climate that made L.A. so idyllic and attractive in the 20th century is now becoming deadly for many of our neighbors,' said Edith de Guzman, adjunct assistant professor at UCLA's Department of Urban Planning and co-lead on the project. 'And simultaneously, our city is shrinking — because we can use less of it. There are fewer places we can be safely and in a way that meets thermal comfort.' ShadeLA brings together agencies such as L.A. County's Chief Sustainability Office, the County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, and a network of nonprofits including City Plants, North East Trees and TreePeople. 'We need a lot of different people coming together to work on the issue,' said Monica Dean, director of the Climate and Sustainability Practice at USC Dornsife Public Exchange and co-lead on the project. 'And we also don't need to just add shade. We also need to take care of and maintain the shade we have.' Unlike many other past greening campaigns around Los Angeles — such as Million Trees LA, which aimed to plant a million trees in a decade — ShadeLA has not set a strict goal for the number of trees or structures it hopes to build. Instead, the initiative emphasizes what it calls 'the quality of shade,' using new high-resolution mapping tools to calculate how much usable, ground-level coverage people actually experience in public spaces where they walk, wait or gather. Those data help participants decide what projects to pursue in order to make the biggest difference, whether that's planting a large-canopy tree on one corner, redesigning a bus stop to provide more overhead cover or creating a pop-up cooling zone in a high-traffic area. Such projects are especially important as Los Angeles starts preparing for the 2028 Olympics, which will draw millions of additional people to the city. 'We're really thinking of the 2028 Games and the preceding mega events as a point of leverage. We're hoping to have those events ... spur Los Angeles to do the right thing and have a legacy,' De Guzman said. That approach builds on the USC Urban Trees Initiative, a five-year research effort that mapped shade gaps across the city and identified specific areas where new trees could have the greatest effect. In Lincoln Heights and Boyle Heights, for example, the study found room for nearly 100 additional trees in Hazard Park, more than 50 at Murchison Street Elementary School, 22 at Hillside Elementary, and over 180 within the Ramona Gardens public housing complex, where residents live next to busy freeways with little natural cover. These areas, researchers say, are among the highest-need zones for planting because they combine high pedestrian activity, low canopy cover and limited access to air conditioning. TreePeople, a longtime leader in Southern California's urban forestry movement, has outlined plans for thousands of new trees in the region — not as part of a citywide quota, but as one piece of ShadeLA's broader push to create high-quality, lasting shade. The group also facilitates volunteer planting events and hosts workshops to teach people how to help the trees survive. As Marcos Trinidad, TreePeople's senior director of forestry, noted, planting trees alone won't solve the problem if the city and Olympic organizers don't commit resources to long-term care. 'What's missing right now is a firm commitment from the city and Olympic organizers — a number, a budget, something we can leverage,' Trinidad said. 'Without that, we risk falling into the same pattern we've seen before, where trees get planted without resources to make sure they survive. We don't want to just put numbers on paper — we want a living, lasting canopy.' Still, he is optimistic about ShadeLA. 'Our hope is that the collaboration will remain and be the vehicle that we can use for increasing canopy shade past the Olympics,' Trinidad said. Ultimately, project leaders hope that the initiative changes how people see the city — leading them to recognize shade not just as a comfort, but also as essential infrastructure for community health and resilience. 'I really want us to start thinking as Angelenos — to sort of train our eyes to see our neighborhoods differently and see where there are opportunities' for shade, Dean said. 'Because the truth is, each of us has some agency and some capacity to be stewards of this civic resource.'

How extreme heat can impact infrastructure
How extreme heat can impact infrastructure

Axios

time26-06-2025

  • Climate
  • Axios

How extreme heat can impact infrastructure

As unusually hot temperatures sweep much of the U.S. this week, millions of Americans remain under heat advisories or warnings. The big picture: While extreme heat can have burdensome impacts on our bodies, it can also have tremendous impacts on vital — and aging — infrastructure. Such heat can leave behind devastating consequences on infrastructure, from electricity outages to damaged airport runways and faulty rail lines, per the Fifth National Climate Assessment, a multi-agency effort. "We have all this infrastructure that is meant to make us comfortable in the urban area," said Edith de Guzman, a water equity and adaptation policy specialist at the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation. "But not only is that infrastructure exacerbating the heat, the heat is actually deteriorating that infrastructure." Zoom in: Extreme heat can impact various types of infrastructure including that of energy, transportation, buildings, water and even digital infrastructure, de Guzman said. Energy: High temperatures can increase energy demand with more people using air conditioning to cool down. That puts stress on the grid and can lead to brownouts or blackouts. Transportation: In terms of roadways, heat can soften asphalt which can potentially create safety issues and require more frequent replacement and maintenance. Concrete can expand, crack and buckle. For trains, rail made of metal expand and lead to tracks that buckle, which increases derailment risk. Bridges, too, can suffer from expansion of steel. Building: A lot of materials used, like for roofs and sealant, can degrade faster due to heat. Water: Underground pipes, including sewer pipes, can expand and shift due to heat, which could cause leaks and breakages. Machinery at pumping stations and treatment plants could become overburdened. There could also be an impact to water quality because pollutants can be concentrated when then there's less water due to evaporation. Digital: There's already a very high cooling demand for data centers under regular conditions. Heat makes those data centers more vulnerable to power issues and overheating. Equipment such as traffic signals, sensors and telecommunication can also become impacted as they rely on the electrical infrastructure that powers other digital infrastructure. Zoom out: All infrastructure is designed with some heat exposure in mind through codes, guidelines and regulations, said Mikhail Chester, professor at Arizona State University's School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment. But when extreme temperatures exceed that threshold, there are failures that, over time, can start to compromise the integrity of the infrastructure. Case in point: Roadways that are not designed for the extreme heat may see additional rutting and cracking. After enough cracking, there will start to be potholes from water intrusion. "Places like Arizona and Phoenix are more aligned with the extremes that we're currently experiencing," Chester said, adding that other places in the U.S. that are not specifically designed for the extreme heat are more vulnerable. But, he added, "nobody's spared from a heat wave and the consequences that it has on infrastructure." Between the lines: Human-caused climate change is making heat waves more likely and more intense, researchers say.

L.A. fires put new drinking-water safety measures to the test
L.A. fires put new drinking-water safety measures to the test

Yahoo

time08-03-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

L.A. fires put new drinking-water safety measures to the test

A month after the 2017 Tubbs fire, a Santa Rosa resident finally returned home to one of the handful of houses still standing amid a field of destruction. They turned on their kitchen faucet and smelled gasoline. It was an immediate red flag for Santa Rosa Water, which quickly sent over technicians to test the tap. In the water, they found benzene, a known carcinogen — a discovery that sent shockwaves through the scientific and water safety world. In Santa Rosa, the contamination investigation would expand from a single household to the entire burn area. As devastating urban wildfires continued to increase in frequency in the American West, the problem would reappear — in Paradise, Calif.; in Colorado; in Hawaii; and finally in L.A.'s Pacific Palisades and Altadena. All the while, scientists, regulators and local utilities raced to figure out what was happening and how to keep residents safe. By the time the Eaton and Palisades fires broke out, scientists and the state could hand the affected utilities a playbook on how to restore safe water for their customers. The lessons learned helped the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, which serves the Pacific Palisades, restore safe drinking water to all its customers just two months after the fires erupted — compared to an entire year in Santa Rosa. Yet, the Altadena utilities are still fighting to restore safe water. And, as with the Tubbs fire, the recovery has still been tinged with persisting scientific debates and uncomfortable unknowns. 'We are in a sort of brave new world as we shift into this reality of increasingly more urban wildfires,' said Edith de Guzman, who researches water equity and climate adaptation policy at UCLA. 'We have impacts that we're not really even sure how to measure or monitor.' Read more: Inside the battle to restore drinking water in Altadena and Pacific Palisades Benzene wasn't the only contaminant in Santa Rosa's and L.A.'s postfire water. Scientists are still debating which chemicals utilities ought to test for and which, given the costly and timely process of analyzing for dozens of chemicals, can go unchecked. And, while scientists have studied the danger of long-term exposure to trace amounts of contaminants like benzene in drinking water, less is known about the short-term risks of high exposures through day-to-day activities like showering and running the dish washer. After the smoke settled in Altadena and the Pacific Palisades, the local water utilities quickly issued 'do not drink' and 'do not boil' orders, under the advice of the state regulator — the State Water Resources Control Board's Division of Drinking Water. The orders are designed to limit dangerous exposures to benzene, found in everything from plastic to treated construction wood to wildfire smoke. Over decades, drinking or breathing it in can increase the risk of developing leukemia and other blood cancers. While boiling water can kill off the typical non-fire contamination suspects, pathogens, it doesn't work for benzene. And, with a lower boiling point than water, benzene can easily enter the air when water is heated up. Consequently, the state has developed best practices to keep residents safe, including not only avoiding drinking or boiling the water, but also avoiding hot showers, hot tubs and clothes dryers. However, scientists warn that these recommendations are not yet based on any comprehensive science. Reams of research link long-term small exposures of the contaminant to cancer risk. Few studies explore the potentials of short, intense household exposures. 'Right now, there's no chemical modeling, mathematical modeling or any exposure assessments that have been conducted to determine the answers to [these] questions,' said Andrew Whelton, a professor of civil environmental engineering at Purdue University and a leading researcher in the field of postfire water safety. Read more: Scientists urge caution after a carcinogen is detected in water in fire-stricken areas In California, while the maximum allowed level of benzene in drinking water is 1 part per billion, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment says the concentration needs to be as low as 0.15 ppb to confidently say there will be no long-term chronic health effects. For the short-term, the Environmental Protection Agency deems exposure to over 200 ppb for longer than one day dangerous. In the aftermath of the recent fires, utilities in L.A. County have found levels as high as 190 ppb in Altadena and 71.3 ppb in the Palisades. However, after the Tubbs fire, Santa Rosa found levels as high as 40,000 ppb. After Santa Rosa Water first tested its customer's kitchen faucet, the utility, along with the Division of Drinking Water and the EPA, launched a full investigation into the contamination of the drinking water of the affected area, and the results were unlike anything that had been seen before. 'We did a lot of research in the start to see if any other agency had experienced this,' said Jennifer Burke, director of Santa Rosa Water. 'We did not find anything anywhere.' What Santa Rosa Water found — not in the literature, but in its own backyard — was that a whole range of potentially dangerous chemicals lurked in the water. The discovery has helped guide post-wildfire recovery since. Santa Rosa Water first tried to figure out how a contaminant like benzene could've entered the water. The utility looked into whether nearby underground gasoline storage facilities could've been compromised, or if benzene was present in the soil, but found no compelling evidence. Then, a hypothesis emerged that would later be borne out in the lab and testing data from water systems postfire across the West. Parts of Santa Rosa's water system had lost pressure during the blaze as firefighters tapped into hydrants, residents ran hoses to protect their properties and damaged connections spewed water into the street. As the water level dropped, leaving higher elevations dry, it created a void in the system. To fill the pressure void, experts theorized, the open connections began to suck toxic ash, soot and smoke into the pipes. It meant the contamination had the potential to quickly spread far beyond one home. And wildfire smoke carries much more than just benzene. In it is every household toxic chemical that could've burned. It's a reality that poses a daunting task for scientists and utilities. 'We're chasing after a growing and an increasingly complex reality of living in the modern world, where we're creating all of these new chemicals all the time,' de Guzman said. Among the complex sea of chemicals scattered through postfire burn areas, water safety experts have settled on a few groups of the most concerning contaminants based on their risks to humans and their presence in the Tubbs and Camp fires in California, the Marshall fire in Colorado and the Maui fires in Hawaii. During previous fires, some experts argued testing for benzene alone is sufficient, saying the chemical, which time and time again has exceeded safe levels most often in postfire systems, acts as a good 'indicator' for whether other chemicals may be present. However, with mounting evidence of other contaminants lurking in water systems postfire, even without benzene present, it's an increasingly rare position. Most now argue that utilities ought to test not only for benzene, but at least the rest of its immediate family, called volatile organic compounds, or VOCs. Others say they should also test for VOCs' less-aggressive cousins, semi-volatile organic compounds, or SVOCs. With higher boiling points than VOCs, SVOCs are less likely to evaporate, but still pose an inhalation and ingestion risk. SVOCs are not necessarily less toxic to humans. Some VOCs and SVOCs — like the chemical responsible for the smell of pine in trees and car fresheners — are essentially harmless. Others, like benzene, are toxic to humans. 'I don't think [benzene] should be viewed as a perfect, comprehensive indicator, but it's very much a good start,' said Chad Seidel, an environmental engineering research affiliate at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and president of Corona Environmental Consulting, which assisted in the Marshall fire recovery. 'I will say this: It is dramatically better than what the responses have been, say, not that long ago — maybe more than five years ago, where nobody was doing any of this.' In practice, many postfire water safety experts argue that to confidently say the water is safe for customers, utilities cannot rely on benzene alone. 'There is no evidence that benzene is an indicator of contamination. … It simply isn't,' Whelton said. 'Unfortunately, that misinformation has traveled and continues to travel into decision-makers' opinions.' In 2023, the California state Legislature codified postfire testing for benzene into law. While only benzene testing is required, the state's Division of Drinking Water recommends that utilities test for the full range of VOCs — and the state, at times, has called benzene an 'indicator' for other contaminants. For the Paradise Irrigation District, although testing for the full suite of VOCs can take slightly longer and cost a fair bit more, it was a pretty obvious choice (even amid pushback from the Division of Drinking Water and the EPA, at the time). 'We decided to go above and beyond,' said Kevin Phillips, district manager with the Paradise Irrigation District, 'because we wanted to give … our customers the utmost confidence that there were no other VOCs present in there.' Yet, many customers, living with cold showers and bottled water for months on end, remain frustrated with the lengthy process and uncertain if their water is safe. It's why many water safety experts and utilities that have experienced postfire recovery have urged the L.A. utilities to remain as transparent as possible. 'The last thing any water system wants is … to create some urban myth that the water in this certain water system is not safe,' said Kurt Kowar, director of public works for Louisville, Colo., which was devastated by the Marshall fire. 'That can always stick with you, and if you can't be transparent and generate trust through recovery, I think that would be a disservice to the community — if they don't trust their water provided for the rest of their life.' The Paradise Irrigation District created an interactive online map of its entire system and the location of every test taken. And the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power created an online dashboard a month and a half after the fires listing the number of VOC detections in each of its zones in the Palisades fire burn area and the levels detected. Meanwhile, the smaller Altadena utilities, with limited personnel and resources, have been regularly posting joint updates to their websites outlining their recent testing, affected streets and the highest benzene levels found. But none of the L.A. utilities have posted the full testing data with exact locations. Part of the communication problem is a lack of guidance and assistance from the state, said Gregory Pierce, director of the UCLA Water Resources Group. That said, thanks to their much better understanding of the water contamination problem than in previous fires, the L.A. utilities have been optimistic about returning service far faster than they would have been a decade ago. Once Santa Rosa Water understood the problem it had on its hands, it started by aggressively flushing its system — opening up hydrants and valves to purge water through the entire network of pipes, hoping the released water would take the contaminants with it. While it worked for many areas within the burn area, the hardest-hit region proved difficult. By the time the city had gotten to flushing, benzene had bound itself to the pipes. Santa Rosa was forced to replace not only service lines to individual homes, but some of the main lines along the street as well. The L.A. utilities have been betting on flushing alone. It's a strategy that seems to have worked — in part because they knew what steps to take earlier than utility companies in previous wildfires. In the Palisades, full service has already been restored. The Altadena utilities have made significant progress and remain hopeful they'll be able to restore safe water much faster than the year it took Santa Rosa and the eight months it took Paradise. On the one-month anniversary of the fires, LADWP hesitantly and optimistically said it hoped to restore safe drinking water to the Palisades by the end of February. It succeeded in doing so on the two-month anniversary — only one week later than the estimate. 'How you can get your customers back to their homes with the utilities they need? It is a heroic effort to pull those things off,' Seidel said. 'I applaud those people that are willing to step up and pull off what it takes to do those things. It's not easy.' This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

L.A. fires put new drinking-water safety measures to the test
L.A. fires put new drinking-water safety measures to the test

Los Angeles Times

time08-03-2025

  • Health
  • Los Angeles Times

L.A. fires put new drinking-water safety measures to the test

A month after the 2017 Tubbs fire, a Santa Rosa resident finally returned home to one of the handful of houses still standing amid a field of destruction. They turned on their kitchen faucet and smelled gasoline. It was an immediate red flag for Santa Rosa Water, which quickly sent over technicians to test the tap. In the water, they found benzene, a known carcinogen — a discovery that sent shockwaves through the scientific and water safety world. In Santa Rosa, the contamination investigation would expand from a single household to the entire burn area. As devastating urban wildfires continued to increase in frequency in the American West, the problem would reappear — in Paradise, Calif.; in Colorado; in Hawaii; and finally in L.A.'s Pacific Palisades and Altadena. All the while, scientists, regulators and local utilities raced to figure out what was happening and how to keep residents safe. By the time the Eaton and Palisades fires broke out, scientists and the state could hand the affected utilities a playbook on how to restore safe water for their customers. The lessons learned helped the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, which serves the Pacific Palisades, restore safe drinking water to all its customers just two months after the fires erupted — compared to an entire year in Santa Rosa. Yet, the Altadena utilities are still fighting to restore safe water. And, as with the Tubbs fire, the recovery has still been tinged with persisting scientific debates and uncomfortable unknowns. 'We are in a sort of brave new world as we shift into this reality of increasingly more urban wildfires,' said Edith de Guzman, who researches water equity and climate adaptation policy at UCLA. 'We have impacts that we're not really even sure how to measure or monitor.' Benzene wasn't the only contaminant in Santa Rosa's and L.A.'s postfire water. Scientists are still debating which chemicals utilities ought to test for and which, given the costly and timely process of analyzing for dozens of chemicals, can go unchecked. And, while scientists have studied the danger of long-term exposure to trace amounts of contaminants like benzene in drinking water, less is known about the short-term risks of high exposures through day-to-day activities like showering and running the dish washer. After the smoke settled in Altadena and the Pacific Palisades, the local water utilities quickly issued 'do not drink' and 'do not boil' orders, under the advice of the state regulator — the State Water Resources Control Board's Division of Drinking Water. The orders are designed to limit dangerous exposures to benzene, found in everything from plastic to treated construction wood to wildfire smoke. Over decades, drinking or breathing it in can increase the risk of developing leukemia and other blood cancers. While boiling water can kill off the typical non-fire contamination suspects, pathogens, it doesn't work for benzene. And, with a lower boiling point than water, benzene can easily enter the air when water is heated up. Consequently, the state has developed best practices to keep residents safe, including not only avoiding drinking or boiling the water, but also avoiding hot showers, hot tubs and clothes dryers. However, scientists warn that these recommendations are not yet based on any comprehensive science. Reams of research link long-term small exposures of the contaminant to cancer risk. Few studies explore the potentials of short, intense household exposures. 'Right now, there's no chemical modeling, mathematical modeling or any exposure assessments that have been conducted to determine the answers to [these] questions,' said Andrew Whelton, a professor of civil environmental engineering at Purdue University and a leading researcher in the field of postfire water safety. In California, while the maximum allowed level of benzene in drinking water is 1 part per billion, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment says the concentration needs to be as low as 0.15 ppb to confidently say there will be no long-term chronic health effects. For the short-term, the Environmental Protection Agency deems exposure to over 200 ppb for longer than one day dangerous. In the aftermath of the recent fires, utilities in L.A. County have found levels as high as 190 ppb in Altadena and 71.3 ppb in the Palisades. However, after the Tubbs fire, Santa Rosa found levels as high as 40,000 ppb. After Santa Rosa Water first tested its customer's kitchen faucet, the utility, along with the Division of Drinking Water and the EPA, launched a full investigation into the contamination of the drinking water of the affected area, and the results were unlike anything that had been seen before. 'We did a lot of research in the start to see if any other agency had experienced this,' said Jennifer Burke, director of Santa Rosa Water. 'We did not find anything anywhere.' What Santa Rosa Water found — not in the literature, but in its own backyard — was that a whole range of potentially dangerous chemicals lurked in the water. The discovery has helped guide post-wildfire recovery since. Santa Rosa Water first tried to figure out how a contaminant like benzene could've entered the water. The utility looked into whether nearby underground gasoline storage facilities could've been compromised, or if benzene was present in the soil, but found no compelling evidence. Then, a hypothesis emerged that would later be borne out in the lab and testing data from water systems postfire across the West. Parts of Santa Rosa's water system had lost pressure during the blaze as firefighters tapped into hydrants, residents ran hoses to protect their properties and damaged connections spewed water into the street. As the water level dropped, leaving higher elevations dry, it created a void in the system. To fill the pressure void, experts theorized, the open connections began to suck toxic ash, soot and smoke into the pipes. It meant the contamination had the potential to quickly spread far beyond one home. And wildfire smoke carries much more than just benzene. In it is every household toxic chemical that could've burned. It's a reality that poses a daunting task for scientists and utilities. 'We're chasing after a growing and an increasingly complex reality of living in the modern world, where we're creating all of these new chemicals all the time,' de Guzman said. Among the complex sea of chemicals scattered through postfire burn areas, water safety experts have settled on a few groups of the most concerning contaminants based on their risks to humans and their presence in the Tubbs and Camp fires in California, the Marshall fire in Colorado and the Maui fires in Hawaii. During previous fires, some experts argued testing for benzene alone is sufficient, saying the chemical, which time and time again has exceeded safe levels most often in postfire systems, acts as a good 'indicator' for whether other chemicals may be present. However, with mounting evidence of other contaminants lurking in water systems postfire, even without benzene present, it's an increasingly rare position. Most now argue that utilities ought to test not only for benzene, but at least the rest of its immediate family, called volatile organic compounds, or VOCs. Others say they should also test for VOCs' less-aggressive cousins, semi-volatile organic compounds, or SVOCs. With higher boiling points than VOCs, SVOCs are less likely to evaporate, but still pose an inhalation and ingestion risk. SVOCs are not necessarily less toxic to humans. Some VOCs and SVOCs — like the chemical responsible for the smell of pine in trees and car fresheners — are essentially harmless. Others, like benzene, are toxic to humans. 'I don't think [benzene] should be viewed as a perfect, comprehensive indicator, but it's very much a good start,' said Chad Seidel, an environmental engineering research affiliate at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and president of Corona Environmental Consulting, which assisted in the Marshall fire recovery. 'I will say this: It is dramatically better than what the responses have been, say, not that long ago — maybe more than five years ago, where nobody was doing any of this.' In practice, many postfire water safety experts argue that to confidently say the water is safe for customers, utilities cannot rely on benzene alone. 'There is no evidence that benzene is an indicator of contamination. … It simply isn't,' Whelton said. 'Unfortunately, that misinformation has traveled and continues to travel into decision-makers' opinions.' In 2023, the California state Legislature codified postfire testing for benzene into law. While only benzene testing is required, the state's Division of Drinking Water recommends that utilities test for the full range of VOCs — and the state, at times, has called benzene an 'indicator' for other contaminants. For the Paradise Irrigation District, although testing for the full suite of VOCs can take slightly longer and cost a fair bit more, it was a pretty obvious choice (even amid pushback from the Division of Drinking Water and the EPA, at the time). 'We decided to go above and beyond,' said Kevin Phillips, district manager with the Paradise Irrigation District, 'because we wanted to give … our customers the utmost confidence that there were no other VOCs present in there.' Yet, many customers, living with cold showers and bottled water for months on end, remain frustrated with the lengthy process and uncertain if their water is safe. It's why many water safety experts and utilities that have experienced postfire recovery have urged the L.A. utilities to remain as transparent as possible. 'The last thing any water system wants is … to create some urban myth that the water in this certain water system is not safe,' said Kurt Kowar, director of public works for Louisville, Colo., which was devastated by the Marshall fire. 'That can always stick with you, and if you can't be transparent and generate trust through recovery, I think that would be a disservice to the community — if they don't trust their water provided for the rest of their life.' The Paradise Irrigation District created an interactive online map of its entire system and the location of every test taken. And the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power created an online dashboard a month and a half after the fires listing the number of VOC detections in each of its zones in the Palisades fire burn area and the levels detected. Meanwhile, the smaller Altadena utilities, with limited personnel and resources, have been regularly posting joint updates to their websites outlining their recent testing, affected streets and the highest benzene levels found. But none of the L.A. utilities have posted the full testing data with exact locations. Part of the communication problem is a lack of guidance and assistance from the state, said Gregory Pierce, director of the UCLA Water Resources Group. That said, thanks to their much better understanding of the water contamination problem than in previous fires, the L.A. utilities have been optimistic about returning service far faster than they would have been a decade ago. Once Santa Rosa Water understood the problem it had on its hands, it started by aggressively flushing its system — opening up hydrants and valves to purge water through the entire network of pipes, hoping the released water would take the contaminants with it. While it worked for many areas within the burn area, the hardest-hit region proved difficult. By the time the city had gotten to flushing, benzene had bound itself to the pipes. Santa Rosa was forced to replace not only service lines to individual homes, but some of the main lines along the street as well. The L.A. utilities have been betting on flushing alone. It's a strategy that seems to have worked — in part because they knew what steps to take earlier than utility companies in previous wildfires. In the Palisades, full service has already been restored. The Altadena utilities have made significant progress and remain hopeful they'll be able to restore safe water much faster than the year it took Santa Rosa and the eight months it took Paradise. On the one-month anniversary of the fires, LADWP hesitantly and optimistically said it hoped to restore safe drinking water to the Palisades by the end of February. It succeeded in doing so on the two-month anniversary — only one week later than the estimate. 'How you can get your customers back to their homes with the utilities they need? It is a heroic effort to pull those things off,' Seidel said. 'I applaud those people that are willing to step up and pull off what it takes to do those things. It's not easy.'

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