Democrats working to aid the recovery effort in SoCal

A lot of great stuff has been posted on Calitics about the fires in Southern California.  I wanted to share the “official” Democratic response and invite folks to join in these efforts.  Thanks for all that you are doing. 

The California Democratic Party, the San Diego Democratic Party and Democrats Work are working together to help Californians devastated by the fires, and we ask you to join us. After the jump there are some ways you can make a difference today and in the hard weeks and months to come.

I want to point out one great fact regarding the third item listed below.  In just over an hour, nearly 100 people from across the state (and even Nevada) signed up with Democrats Work to engage in on-the-ground rebuilding efforts when the time is right. 

Give Food and Household Goods

The San Diego Democratic Party is collecting food and household goods for families in San Diego. They need regular-size items in demand, including canned meat, fruits, vegetables, and juices as well as cleaning supplies, diapers, detergent, and personal hygiene products.  You can also send a gift card for a local food chain (Ralphs, Vons or Albertsons).

Items can be delivered or mailed to:

San Diego Democrats
8304 Clairemont Mesa Blvd., Suite 108
San Diego, California 92111

To make arrangements after-hours or in other locations around the county, email [email protected] or call (858) 277-3367.

Give through the “Virtual Food Bank” – Donate Other Goods or Money to the San Diego Food Bank

The San Diego Democratic Party has partnered with the San Diego Food Bank, which works with a network of more than 260 agencies throughout the San Diego area, to get food to those who need it. The Food Bank has a virtual market where you can shop for goods needed in the area or make a make a direct money contribution. Click here to make a contribution of food or money.


Roll Up Your Sleeves and Help to Rebuild

While there are many things we can do right now to help, there will also be a need in the coming weeks and months for assistance with the rebuilding efforts in the affected communities. Sign-up now to be a volunteer on the ground. We will keep you posted on opportunities to help the rebuilding efforts.  We must help these communities not only while the fires are burning, but, more importantly, with the rebuilding that will go on for many months and even years.

A New Spin on “Asleep At The Wheel”

Fourthbranch Cheney is not all that interested in fires he didn’t actually cause with bombs.

During a cabinet meeting yesterday, Vice President Cheney fell asleep on camera while President Bush was discussing wildfires in California. A Cheney spokeswoman “laughed it off,” telling CNN that the vice president was “practicing meditation.” CNN’s chyron reported that Cheney was seen “meditating” – rather than sleeping – during the cabinet meeting.

In the comments, please write the mantra that Cheney was chanting over and over during this meditation session.

Wildfires: Welcome to Eco-apartheid

The images are strikingly similar. People of color, including children, standing in the middle of a disaster, crying out for help.

First it was Katrina. Today it’s the aftermath of the San Diego County wildfires, where Latino families at refugee centers are reporting family members being taken away by U.S. Border Patrol agents, according to reports on Spanish-language radio and TV. More on the flip…

The LA Times reported yesterday that six undocumented immigrants were arrested for “stealing food and supplies” from the refugee center at Qualcomm.

Six undocumented Mexican immigrants were arrested today by U.S. Border Patrol agents at Qualcomm Stadium, after a report that they were stealing food and water meant for evacuees, according to spokesman Damon Foreman.

It’s happening again. During the Katrina aftermath, African Americans were “looting” shops and stores, while whites were “finding food.” Border Patrol denies, of course, that they are trying to find undocumented immigrants:

“We are not in any means at Qualcomm for enforcement capacity,” he said. “We are not there to take advantage of a situation.”

My question is, why are they there? Why do Border Patrol agents have to be at the evacuation centers at all? Is it not enough that people who are working hard every day to provide a better life for their children have been displaced from their homes? Is it not enough that they will have to figure out how to survive when they are not eligible for any government aid? Or do they have to live in fear of being rounded up by ICE agents, or have to watch as friends or family members are dragged off, at a center that is supposed to be a place for help and support?

Al Gore says in “An Inconvenient Truth,” quoting Winston Churchill, that the global climate crisis is entering an era of consequences. The California wildfires are a consequence of global warming, as many scientists have said — the land is drier because of rising temperatures and more susceptible to fires because of low rainfall.

What is happening now at these refugee centers, and what will be happening in the aftermath of the fires and the recovery effort, is the consequence of what Van Jones calls Eco-apartheid. There are the eco-haves, and the eco-have nots. Those who are able to survive and get through a natural disaster — like the people who took their SUVs and high-tailed it out of New Orleans — and those who cannot — like the folks who waited on their drowning roof for days with no sign of rescue.

Bridging this divide is the greatest challenge of our generation, and it is something progressives must lead on. If we don’t, who will?

Latest Hate Crime: Tupac Shakur’s Statue Vandalized

Most folk don’t know the controversial figure has a statue, but the bronze likeness of slain rapper Tupac Shakur was vandalized twice in three days.  Apparently the “Free the Jena 6” movement has unkindled racism across the country with the top-selling rapper being the latest target of a hangman’s noose.

This incident appears to be only the latest in a string of acts of intimidation occurring across the country ever since African Americans descended upon Jena, LA en masse to protest racial injustice. 

Two of the highest-profile examples were a noose found tied to the office door of a black professor at Columbia University and a noose found stuffed into the sea bag of a black U.S. Coast Guard cadet.  Last week, officials at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport reported finding a noose at an airport construction site.

Authorities in Georgia are investigating a pair of incidents that began early Saturday morning when one or more vandals tied a noose around the neck of the bronze likeness of Shakur that stands in the open “peace garden” of the Tupac Amaru Shakur Center for the Arts in Stone Mountain, Geprgia, an Atlanta suburb.

Versa Manos, a spokesman for the center’s foundation told ABC News the incident involved plastered writings with Sept. 11 and Hurricane Katrina references, as well “vague threats” against rappers and record company executives.

A second incident occurred Monday. A security guard called the police to report there was a man on the grounds of the performing arts allegedly banging on the base of the statue. A man was arrested and charged with misdemeanor trespassing and public drunkenness connected to the second incident.

Detectives have been investigating the first incident, as are Department of Homeland Security investigators.  Specifically, authorities are looking into the stickers that were plastered on the statue, but local authorities caution that they did not consider the rope tied around the neck of the statue to be a noose but a way to fasten a wooden cross to the likeness.

Any prosecution of the incident, if a perpetrator is found and charged, would have to fall under some other statute because Georgia is one of just a few states that does not have a hate crimes law.  The Georgia Supreme Court threw out the state’s hate crime law in 2004 after ruling that it was “unconstitutionally vague.”

Some lawmakers are working on getting a new law passed.  They need to get moving quickly, not for Shakur’s sake but for the next potential victim.

Afeni Shakur, mother of Tupac Shakur and the creator of her son’s foundation — which offers training to young people in the arts issued a statement forgiving whoever vandalized the statue.

“Hate comes in all colors and genders and therefore we will use this act of hate and ignorance to bring our community together and pray for the healing of those who harbor such feeling,” Afeni Shakur wrote on the foundation’s website.

LADN Endangers Workers, Public to Score a Political Point

This piece of mine for Working Californians is now up on FDL.  So go over there to check out the rest.  My favorite is the tidbit I got last night: a worker calling to complain was told by the editor: “I’m not after you, I am after [IBEW President] Brian D’Arcy.”

The Daily News is well known for being virulently anti-worker. Basically, the paper takes the position that everyone should be making poor wages and grateful for having a job, no matter how dangerous. The paper supports privatization and job outsourcing and routinely editorializes against workers’ rights issues.

The other week, the paper published a breathless report about the salaries of Los Angeles Department of Water & Power (LADWP) employees, publishing the name, job title and corresponding salary of all employees in a searchable online database, in tandem with an article about how much they make.

The editor went so far as to put up a note at the head of the article, urging people to read the article and “see how your pay compares with theirs.” This is a divisive attempt to try and depress the salaries of other city employees who are currently in contract negotiations with the city. The Daily News wanted to influence the bargaining process by publicly smearing the LADWP workers. (The paper has since pulled the article, but this link still includes the editor’s note.)

What they ended up doing was putting the workers-and all of us who depend on water and power systems-at risk. Typically when salary information is released for reasons of public transparency, only job titles are listed, not full names. By publishing names, the paper opened up a treasure trove of information for would-be saboteurs. Imagine how much damage someone could do by creating a fake badge, complete with real name and title to get access to our water and power system.

A Town Beseiged: Potrero Residents Battling Blackwater Now Suffer Ravages of Wildfire

(Welcome Miriam, an award winning journalist to Calitics. More info from on the ground there, following up on my post earlier today. Note: I moved some stuff below the fold. – promoted by Julia Rosen)

Potrero, California, the town that has gained national attention for standing up against Blackwater Worldwide’s plan to build a private military-style training camp in their pristine backcountry community east of San Diego, now faces an even more formidable force.  The Harris wildfire which began outside Potrero early Sunday morning has ravaged the small rural community, where many residents remain trapped without supplies four days after the fire began.

“It’s like the Kalahari Desert as you drive down Potrero Valley Road.  There are sand dunes everywhere-dirt and ash,” Jan Hedlun reported via cell phone on Tuesday.  “We can’t get in or out, and we are running out of supplies.” This morning, however, Hedlun said food will be provided to beleaguered residents at the old Volunteer Fire Department Building.  The County recently began initiating its fire consolidation plan, closing some rural volunteer firefighting departments.  But here in Potrero, some residents complained that they never saw a single fire engine until long after their homes burned down.

Stretches where homes once stood along Highway 94 have been reduced to wasteland.  Many homes have burned, although the town’s store, library, and Post Office are still standing.  “There is looting going on up here,” said Hedlun.  Another source described Potrero as a “moonscape with houses here and there.”

Many Potrero residents never received reverse 911 calls warning them to evacuate.  Some rely on cell phones, which were not included in the evacuation system.

“It’s like Armageddon,” said Jill Michaels, who had just four minutes to pack belongings before fleeing flames that singed her husband.  She and her family tried to evacuate but found all roads blocked.  She returned to witness her Potrero home burn to the ground. 

Others suffered worse losses.  Tom Varshock died trying to save his home on the Potrero/Tecate boundary.  His son remains hospitalized with burns over 50% of his body. 

Fires continue to burn on two sides of Potrero, blocking roads in and out.  For the moment, Hedlun assured me this morning, she and others believe they are safe.  Hurricane-force winds that howled through the mountain area on Sunday night have now calmed, giving firefighters cautious optimism to believe the fires may be contained by this weekend.

Portions of the Cleveland National Forest and Hauser Wilderness area adjoining the Blackwater site are believed to have burned, Hedlun said, though residents have not been permitted near the area yet.  Hedlun said.  Military C130 aircraft arrived late yesterday, dropping fire retardant onto the forest, which provides critical habitat for wildlife.

Blackwater’s 824-acre site in Round Potrero Valley, which survived the initial blaze, may also have burned last night.  “There is a haze of smoke rising above it this morning,” Hedlun informed me at 10:00 a.m. today (Wednesday).

  Brian Bonfiglio, vice president of Blackwater West, said Blackwater remains determined to build its planned facility despite the wildfire’s devastation.  Those plans include 11 firing ranges for small and large caliber weapons, an emergency vehicular training track, bunkhouses for 200 trainees, additional training facilities and a large armory to stockpile ammunition.

“I see a tactical operation center for East County fires,” said Bonfiglio, noting that Blackwater’s proposal includes water tanks capable of holding 35,000 gallons.  “Can you imagine how much of a benefit it would be if we were operational now?”

Opponents of Blackwater have suggested that live-fire operations could heighten the risk of fire starting in the box canyon where Blackwater seeks to locate and note that fires have been started by live-fire at military bases in the past.  The Courage Campaign has mounted a petition calling on Senators Diane Feinstein and Barbara Boxer to oppose Blackwater’s base in Potrero for reasons including the proposed facility’s location in a “fire-prone landscape http://www.courageca…

Bonfiglio maintains that shooting areas will have berms, cleared surrounding areas, and a standby fire watch person with fire equipment on hand.  No flares or explosives will be used, he said.

But even a fire started off-site could become an inferno, critics contend, if it were to reach the armory full of ammunition at Blackwater’s site.

Blackwater has sought approval for its project under the County’s new “shelter in place” policy.  The valley, which has only one road in and one road out, would include a 9,600 square foot facility equipped with sprinklers and surrounded by enhanced fire modification zone.  Blackwater has offered to shelter townspeople in its facility in event of a future fire.

But one Potrero resident who remained in town despite evacuation orders observed, “There is no way in hell anyone up here would want to go there during a fire.”  Evacuation would have been required from the valley as fire leap-frogged across the area, said the source, who asked to remain anonymous.

Authorities are still investigating the cause of the blaze, one of several major wildfires now burning throughout San Diego County.  Combined, the fires have forced evacuation of over half a million people – more than fled New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina.  With over a billion dollars in property damage and 1,500 homes burned countywide, the fires are now the worst in California history.

The Harris fire raises many troubling issues with regard to the fate of the Blackwater project.

Hedlun confirmed that Potrero residents will likely request a new Environmental Impact Report be filed, since much critical wildlife habitat and watershed areas have burned.  The original EIR was expected to be completed in December, followed by a vote of the San Diego County Planning Commission and ultimately, the County Board of Supervisors. 

Those votes would rely in part on an advisory vote cast by the Potrero Planning Group in favor of the Blackwater project.  Angry residents had mounted a recall election of all pro-Blackwater planners.  That election, set for December 11th, was slated to be a mandatory vote-by-mail election with ballots going out in early November.

San Diego’s Registrar of Voters, Debra Seiler, has not yet responded to an inquiry asking whether the recall election may be postponed because of the fire, or how she intends to assure that voters who lost homes or have been displaced will receive ballots and be able to cast their votes.  At least two planners facing recall have lost their homes.  Fates of some candidates running on a “Save Potrero” anti-Blackwater slate remain unknown.  Some voters now face divided loyalties, sympathizing with neighbors who lost homes and another planner facing recall who reportedly saved several houses from burning.

Residents in Potrero, scarred by internal strife and fire,  now seek time to heal. Hedlun held out hope that Blackwater may yet decide to abandon its plan to open up a training camp in Potrero.

“For now,” she concluded, “We are digging out, cleaning up, and looking to see what’s left.”

 

Fire, Water, and Global Warming: It’s All One Crisis

There were hurricanes before Katrina, and Southern California wildfires before Witch Creek, Santiago Canyon, and Running Springs. As those of us who have ever lived in SoCal know, the fall winds can easily turn the brown hillsides into menacing flame.

But like the hurricanes spawned by the Atlantic Ocean, the fires spawned by the Santa Ana winds are growing worse. Even though the current danger has not yet passed in SoCal, it is worth examining the links between global warming and wildfire. We’ve known for some time that the two were linked. Perhaps now it is time to finally get serious and do something about it.

The key isn’t merely higher temperatures. At the center of the problem is moisture. California is at the opening stages of the worst water crisis in its modern history. Without enough rainfall, plants and trees will dry out more quickly and more thoroughly, leaving more fuel for fires. From today’s SF Chronicle:

“Fires are burning hotter and bigger, becoming more damaging and dangerous to people and to property,” U.S. Forest Service Chief Gail Kimbell said. “Each year the fire season comes earlier and lasts longer.”

The flames stretching from Malibu to the Mexican border struck during the driest year in Southern California history. Measurements taken by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection detected less than 10 percent moisture in the region’s vegetation. The moisture level in kiln-dried lumber is generally 12 percent.

“They got less rain than they’ve ever gotten,” said Hugh Safford, a Forest Service ecologist. “Any time you have a dry year like this one, you are going to get fires.”

As Paul Rosenberg at OpenLeft notes, however, this has been known since 2003. Other studies make the point even clearer.

The Southwestern US – and the Colorado River basin in particular – has been in a drought since October 1999. As last week’s cover story in the San Diego Reader explained, “As far back as 2004, the U.S. Geological Survey started calling this drought “comparable to or more severe than the largest-known drought in 500 years.” The drought is having a catastrophic effect on vegetation, including the centuries-old oaks that dot the hillsides and canyons of Southern California:

Duncan McFetridge’s oaks and others suffering in the Cleveland National Forest get none of the Sacramento water. And trees are thirsty creatures. They say that a mature oak tree needs 300 to 500 gallons of water a day. But you have to wonder: these trees must have endured droughts like this before, and now they must have more capable roots than ever before. How is it they’re succumbing?

Orrin Davis, whose company Butler Drilling has been drilling water wells in the mountains east of San Diego since the 1960s, says oaks are vulnerable to changes in the water table. “Back in the ’70s, ’80s, you’d have to drill down an average of 400 feet to reach water. Today, it’s 800 to 900 feet. I’ve had to go to 1400 feet. In my 40 years, this is one of the longest droughts. As far as I’m concerned, this drought has been going since the early, mid-’90s.”

He says the die-off has been going on for years. “If it’s true that this is the worst drought for 500 years, these are drought conditions these oak trees have never experienced. And I would estimate Duncan’s oaks were 300 to 400 years old, the bigger ones.”

The lack of rainfall causes a cascade effect on water supplies and, consequently, on vegetation. Without rainfall, cities and developers have to draw down already-stressed aquifers, depleting the soil moisture that helps keep plants somewhat watered even in the dry months. As this is drawn down, the ongoing lack of rainfall means the aquifers aren’t getting replenished. Stresses on the Colorado River mean California must reduce its share of water drawn down from the river. And the ongoing problems with the Sierra snowpack and the Delta mean that Southern California gets less water delivered – reinforcing the stress on groundwater.

Worse, the lack of readily available water could potentially hamper firefighting efforts. Already this week the Metropolitan Water District estimated that over 600 million gallons of water had been used, a significant spike, to knock down the flames. Pumps ran overtime to keep the water pressure high enough for firefighters to use. As global warming distresses water supplies even further, the darkest scenario comes closer to reality – an inability to both supply cities and beat back hotter, more intense wildfire.

And it is not clear, and probably not likely, that there are any new sources of water to develop. This week the New York Times Magazine ran a feature story titled “The Future Is Drying Up” – focusing on the Colorado River drought and responses in Southern Nevada and the Colorado Front Rage to the crisis. Water managers in Colorado are trying to buy rights to agricultural water, both on the Plains and in the Rockies. But those sources are themselves stressed; there isn’t enough to go around. Taking her cues from William Mulholland, Pat Mulroy of the Southern Nevada Water Authority has decided to go after water supplies in the surrounding deserts – but here again it is not certain that the supplies are enough to meet demand.

This drought, so far, is a drop in the bucket compared to megadroughts that hit this state several centuries ago. As Mike Davis recounts in his crucial environmental history of Southern California, Ecology of Fear, researchers have discovered a 200-year period of drought hit the state around the 1200s, and suspect many more exist in the historical climate record. (This is the same drought believed to have forced the dispersal of the Anasazi culture in Arizona.)

Climate change in California is expected to produce a hotter and drier climate, with a reduced snowpack. Precipitation in the Sierra is expected to fall as rain more often than snow, forcing significant shifts in how water is stored. Nobel laureate Steven Chu of the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab told the NYT Magazine:

even the most optimistic climate models for the second half of this century suggest that 30 to 70 percent of the snowpack will disappear. “There’s a two-thirds chance there will be a disaster,” Chu said, “and that’s in the best scenario.”

The real crisis we face is a water crisis. Global warming will leave us drier and thirstier before it inundates our coastlines. And the warming climate, combined with reduced water supplies, will make the fires larger and more difficult to control. Just as many climatologists expect a repeat of Hurricane Katrina before long, we must confront the likelihood that the fires and evacuations experienced in SoCal this week will repeat themselves as well, so long as the drought continues.

What to do about this problem? In the next few weeks we’ll continue to discuss that subject here at Calitics. It is worth noting that these fires broke out just a few weeks after the collapse of the special session on water in Sacramento. Republicans, insisting that new dams be part of any water solution, torpedoed Democratic plans to both restore the delta and provide funds to localities to develop sustainable water supplies and, more importantly, stronger conservation measures. The California Republican Party has now apparently decided that the concept of global warming and any effort to do anything about it are their primary targets, and they will do anything to prevent action on global warming or the water crisis. Nevermind the fact that dams are pointless if less rain and snow are falling. Republicans appear quite happy to leave Californians at further risk of catastrophic water shortfalls. In their inaction, California’s future hangs in the balance.

Blackwater and the Fires

(full disclosure: I work for Courage Campaign) Note: this post was adapted from one posted earlier on dailykos

This past Sunday I was all set to have a call with the local activists on the ground in the tiny town of Potrero where Blackwater is planning on setting up a training facility on 824 acres in a fire-prone box canyon with one way in and out.  We were going to talk about ways that the Courage Campaign could support them during the upcoming recall election to boot the Planning Board members who voted to support Blackwater’s proposal.  But the locals had to evacuate due to a fire bearing down on the town and we canceled the call.

Until this morning, only word we have had from them was via the San Diego Union Tribune where Jan Hedlun, one of the organizers was quoted talking about her former colleague who was killed in the fire.  His son is in the hospital with four firefighters after a heroic rescue.  We did hear from Jan today.  She is ok.  Her house survived, though countless others in the town were destroyed.

This weekend, we were planning to travel to Potrero for a face-to-face meeting.  But we have decided not to make the trip, given what has happened.  Since we don’t even know for sure if they still have their homes at that point, now is not the best time to be entering into this potentially destroyed community.

What we can do is be here waiting in the wings when the fight resumes.  What we can do is let them know we have their back.  That was the message we delivered to Courage Campaign members last night.  Below the fold is that email.  Please join me in passing on a message of support to the brave people of Potrero.  They have a lot on their plate now, but perhaps we can be some moral support.  Blackwater has their army.  We have ours.

Meanwhile, what is Blackwater doing?  The are asking people for PR support, for them.  Much more below the fold.

Yesterday (via a press release), the Courage Campaign called on Blackwater USA to abandon plans to build a para-military training facility in Potrero, located in East San Diego County and site of at least one fatality and some of the worst damage caused by the California wildfires.

With over 1 million people displaced, 1,418 structures destroyed, and at least 5 people confirmed dead in Southern California, Blackwater USA sent an email to its supporters today with the following subject line: “A Request for Your Support”.

But, instead of asking its members to provide financial and volunteer support to Southern Californians victimized by the wildfires, Blackwater asked its supporters for public relations help:

“While we can’t ask that each supporter do everything, Blackwater asks that everyone does something. Contact your lawmakers and tell them to stand by the truth… Tell the Blackwater story and encourage your representatives to seek the truth instead of reading negative propaganda and drawing the wrong conclusions.

And here is the quote we included from Rick Jacobs:

Erik Prince and his Blackwater cronies have hewn the fine art of Orwellian double-speak. While San Diego County burns, Blackwater is more concerned about defending its corporate image. Maybe they should take this opportunity to recognize that the para-military base they want to build in East San Diego County would actually significantly increase fire danger to the people of Potrero and abandon their plans to build that base.

We are still waiting for their response.

Here is the email we sent the other night.  Lot’s of good background information on what is going on in Potrero with respect to Blackwater.

Dear Julia,

As I write this, massive fires are raging across Southern California. While it is quiet and normal at my house in Los Angeles, I can see smoke in the distance and smell it in the air.

And I keep thinking about the good people of Potrero — a serene small community in East San Diego County — that I met just a few weeks ago as we rallied together to block Blackwater from building a base in their tiny, beautiful town.

These concerned community members have been working for months to stop Blackwater from building a mercenary training facility on 824 acres, consisting of 11 firing ranges, a helipad, and an emergency vehicle operator’s course covering the equivalent of 10 football fields. As we watch the fire burn across the area today, one can only imagine what might have happened if an armory full of ammunition and explosives were located inside this box canyon.

I was inspired and proud to march with the good folks of Potrero, people who are not usually political, but who know that if they do not stand up against Blackwater in their own community, then no one will.

We need to show our support for the people of San Diego County at this difficult time. Click here to send a brief message to Potrero residents expressing your support and then consider sending a donation to the San Diego Foundation’s After the Fires Fund:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Potrero

Beyond the damage and destruction to life and property, the timing of this wildfire could not b e much worse. This fire exploded just as the people of Potrero were preparing for a recall election on December 11 to kick out the planning group members who approved Blackwater’s base. With ballots scheduled to be mailed in early November to less than 600 registered voters in this historic vote-by-mail recall, Potrero residents were preparing for an intense campaign over the next six weeks.

But the actual landscape — and the political landscape — of Potrero have been transformed over the last 48 hours.

There’s no time to waste. On Sunday, if the situation permits, I will travel down to Potrero with my Courage Campaign colleagues Eden James and Julia Rosen. If we are able, we will hand-deliver your notes of support to the people of Potrero, survey the damage and determine how we can help them move forward.

Please click here to watch a brief YouTube preview of a documentary film being made about the battle over Blackwater and the people of Potrero. Then consider sending a donation, and let them know that you are behind them:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Potrero

Jan Hedlun and Carl Meyer are two Potrero residents featured in the documentary film produced by Alternate Focus that you can watch at the link above. Although she is not identified, Jan is the first woman appearing on-screen, describing how the Potrero residents “first heard of Blackwater.”

Just last Sunday, as we were about to talk with both Jan and Carl by conference call about how to help them block Blackwater’s base, news broke of a huge fire moving towards Potrero. We spoke with Jan again that evening but, despite many repeated attempts, we have not heard back from either Jan or Carl since Sunday night. While we ass ume they are OK, reports from East San Diego County have been unclear and we remain deeply concerned.

Obviously, the last thing Jan, Carl and their fellow concerned citizens can think about right now is Blackwater and the recall election. But I can guarantee you that Blackwater is thinking about nothing BUT that recall election. From what we understand, Blackwater is already crafting arguments to defend their proposed base and play on people’s emotions during this crisis. Blackwater will likely argue that their base will not increase fire danger in San Diego County even as they plan to build it in a brushy, dry box canyon with only one way in and one way out.

We need to be there for Jan and Carl and everyone in Potrero. After watching the YouTube video, will you consider sending a donation to the “After the Fires Fund” or a note showing your support for the people of Potrero? On Sunday, we’ll hand-deliver the note for you:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Potrero

While the good people of Potrero are focused on recovering from this disaster, we will continue to keep you updated on the other disaster threatening their community — Blackwater’s plans to build a mercenary base on their pristine land, just a few miles from the California border.

Thank you again for everything you are doing to support the people of Potrero.

Rick Jacobs
Chair

P.S. Three weeks ago, we asked you to sign your name to a letter to Senator Dianne Feinstein and Senator Barbara Boxer about Blackwater’s base, including a warning about Potrero’s “fire-prone landscape”:

“Not only will Blackwater’s proposed California paramilitary base disrupt the lives of its residents, but it will also threaten the pristine natural habitat of the Round Potrero Valley, which includes part of Cleveland National Forest and is adjacent to the proposed Hauser Wilderness preserve. The regular detonation of firearms would be a risk both to the fire-prone landscape as well as to the wildlife that currently calls that area home, including the golden eagle and the California condor.”

Despite this ominous warning, Senator Feinstein and Senator Boxer have failed to respond. The residents of Potrero and San Diego County can’t wait for politicians to act to reduce the fire danger posed by Blackwater. That’s why the Courage Campaign is getting involved now.

To show your support in their time of need, please consider sending a donation to the “After the Fires Fund” and a note of support to the people of Potrero:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Potrero

Hundreds of people from around the country have already sent messages.  Here are a few highlights of mine.  I have to admit they made tears run down my face.

I know it’s asking a lot to ask you to continue to stand strong against Blackwater in the face of these devastating fires.  But please, don’t give up the fight.  You’re fighting for all Californians.  I’m standing shoulder-to-shoulder with you in spirit. -Jennifer, Manteca, CA

Our hearts are with you during this most difficult time. We admire your courage and your work in blocking Blackwater. We hope that you will be able continue your fight and hope that you will be soon recover from this devastating fire -Inge, Blue Bell, PA

viva potrero!!  i know sometimes each of us feels alone, and, more particularly, feels hopeless ….  this is just to let you know that YOU ARE NOT ALONE, and we’ll all make it with a little help from our friends.  peace. -Artie, Montrose, CA

Please know how proud your fellow citizens are of you for taking a stand for what you believe in and how much our hearts are with you during this difficult time.  I hope we might be as inspirational to you as you have been to us. -Lise, San Francisco, CA

We have Blackwater in North Carolina, which we don’t want…we stand with you in this. Find a way to keep them out. No one needs this Bush controlled army in America. -Kenneth, Browns Summit, NC

We gave what we could today to the After the Fires Fund, because we are especially grateful to those of you who took a stand against Blackwater.  The idea of having a private army in the U.S. is outrageous, and we must not tolerate having them in California–ever! We hope you will get all the support you need to return to your peaceful lives in Portrero.  We will be watching. – James & Suzanne, Manhattan Beach, CA

I watched the skies turn black and the ash cover my town of South Lake Tahoe this past June. I have friends who have lost all their personal belongings. We suffered no human casualties and I hope you all remain safe as well. Know that the fight you are waging, against nature, and then once that’s passed, against a mercenary army and training ground, is supported by fellow Californians and Americans just like me. Thank you for all the work you are doing to bring the shameful efforts of the Blackwater training camp into the light in an effort to destroy it. You are my heroes.  -Liz, South Lake Tahoe, CA

Join them in sending a message to the brave people of Potrero.  I promise to report back on the delivery.

I want to note that the donation link on the page is to the San Diego Foundation thanks to noweaseles at daily kos who answered my request for an organization other than Red Cross to send donations.  Everyone down in SD County that we talked to had bad experiences with Red Cross in the past and suggested we direct people to another charity.  The goal of the donations is to support relief efforts after the initial crisis is over.

Thursday Fire Thread

(Bumped – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

Two more bodies were found in a home in Poway, bringing the current official tally to three, but many more undocumented immigrants are feared dead in the canyons near the border. Over 695 square miles have burned, or a bit more than half the size of Rhode Island. About 1500 residences have been destroyed in San Diego County alone. And, amazingly, more people have been evacuated from these fires than from the Katrina disaster. This is truly one of our country's most major disasters.  All that being said, the County of San Diego has already received its first request for a building permit to replace a destroyed home. And the population at Qualcomm Stadium is dwindling, now down to about 12,000.

However, the actual work of controlling the fire will take some time yet. Over 5,000 firefighters are now fighting the blazes, and there is plenty of work for them.  The fire at Lake Arrowhead is expected to be controlled soon, and firefighters feel they are making good progress with the Santa Anas dying down.  Here is some information on some outstanding fires:

Witch Creek…<200,000 acres, 20 percent contained
Harris……..75,000 acres, 10 percent contained
Poomacha……35,000 acres, 10 percent contained
Rice Canyon… 9,500 acres, 20 percent contained
Horno … 17,000 acres, 40 percent contained

On the frustrating front, some minor looting has been observed across the region. Two men were arrested trying to enter Mexico with stolen loot in one incident, and in another two 18-year-olds were arrested for looting in Ramona. Arson is beginning to look like a possibility in some of the fires, investigators are now looking into the question. Officials in San Bernadino County report that they have shot and killed a suspected arsonist.

The Los Angeles County Public Health office has updated their 211 page to reflect resources to assist Southland Fires 2007. Here's the page from San Diego County San Diego County Fire information. Speaker Fabian Nunez and the Assembly Dem Caucus have a new Emergency Services Website.  Here's one Google Map with Fire information, and another, KPBS Google Map of San Diego fires. And don't forget the U-T's fireblog. Over the flip you'll find a lot more information phone numbers.

Blood donations are greatly needed. The San Diego Blood Bank will hold blood drives Tuesday at Qualcomm Stadium, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., the Del Mar Fairgrounds, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., and Big O Tires at 1106 Garnet Ave. Pacific Beach, (92109) from 12:30 to 5:30 p.m.. Also, check out the Red Cross schedule. If you would like to donate money, our recommendation is the San Diego Foundation's After the Fire Fund. You can donate online here. I should also note this great diary with a list of resources and ways to volunteer and help out.

UPDATE: (1:20PM by Brian) The major corridors of San Diego are now open, but it was delayed by a press conference by Bush.  The Decider apparently thought that a photo-op with him on top of some rubble was more important than letting San Diegans back to their homes.

In other news, the ATF has decided that the 22,000 acre Santiago Fire was arson.  Three origin points are being treated as crime scenes. 

UPDATE (3PM by Brian):  The Harris fire is shifting back towards Potrero, so the city is back off limits.  For more on Potrero, see this diary from Miriam Raftery.  The City of Ramona is still off limits, but apparently that angered some residents who broke through a CHP roadblock, National Guard troops were brought in to cool off heated tempers. There are new evac orders for Lawson Valley, Carveacre, but the evac order was lifted for Rancho Sante Fe.

Animal Evacuations: 818-991-0071
Arrowhead Schools 909-499-9900
Buckweed, Canyon Fire: 323-881-2411
Coronado Hills Fire: 619-590-3160
Grass Valley Fire: 909-383-5688
Harris, Rice, McCoy Fire: 619-590-3160
Irvine: 714-628-7085
Lake Forest 714-628-7085
Malibu: 310-456-2489
Orange County 800-540-8282
Ranch Fire: 626-574-5208
Riverside: 909.988.3650
Roca Fire: 951-940-6985
Santa Clarita Evacuations: 661-295-6366
Santiago Fire: 714-573-6200
Sedgewick Fire: 805-681-5546
Slide and Witch: Fire 619-590-3160
US Forest Line: 626-574-5208