Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.
Sorry to the first PP but this is right. If your stepmom and mom had been paying appropriate amounts of property taxes for the past few decades then the area would have had a better infrastructure for dealing with catastrophic wildfires. Like many others, they have not been paying to maintain the area. Think of it like they basically got free rent for the past few decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Texas firefighters deploying to California to help fight wildfires
Killeen FD said it is sending a crew to staff a fire engine as part of an Emergency Management Assistance Compact request, which is a mutual aid system with the Texas Division of Emergency Management agency.
“As firefighters, our commitment knows no borders,” Killeen Fire Chief Jim Kubinski said. “When communities are in crisis, we step up to support one another, no matter the distance. We are proud to lend a hand and do our part to protect lives and property.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/central-texas-firefighters-deploying-to-california-to-help-fight-wildfires/ar-BB1rg0CV
We all love firefighters, but I hope you’re not trying to make it seem like this is some amazing gift from Texas. It’s normal procedure and how all large wildland fires are fought. No jurisdiction could afford to maintain the enormous number of people and equipment required. Firefighters come from all over the US and Canada. They come from the military and from private companies. 30% of those fighting the fires are inmates who are paid a few dollars a day.
Anonymous wrote:Texas firefighters deploying to California to help fight wildfires
Killeen FD said it is sending a crew to staff a fire engine as part of an Emergency Management Assistance Compact request, which is a mutual aid system with the Texas Division of Emergency Management agency.
“As firefighters, our commitment knows no borders,” Killeen Fire Chief Jim Kubinski said. “When communities are in crisis, we step up to support one another, no matter the distance. We are proud to lend a hand and do our part to protect lives and property.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/central-texas-firefighters-deploying-to-california-to-help-fight-wildfires/ar-BB1rg0CV
Anonymous wrote:I know so many people are talking about this fire in the palisades but there are other fires in places like Altadena that have primarily impacted non celebrities and middle class families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.
+1000000000000
Can’t they still pass on the land as an inherited property under prop 13 assessments? Just the newly built house would then qualify for a current assessment. The land is the most expensive part of property there.
Anonymous wrote:Texas firefighters deploying to California to help fight wildfires
Killeen FD said it is sending a crew to staff a fire engine as part of an Emergency Management Assistance Compact request, which is a mutual aid system with the Texas Division of Emergency Management agency.
“As firefighters, our commitment knows no borders,” Killeen Fire Chief Jim Kubinski said. “When communities are in crisis, we step up to support one another, no matter the distance. We are proud to lend a hand and do our part to protect lives and property.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/central-texas-firefighters-deploying-to-california-to-help-fight-wildfires/ar-BB1rg0CV
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.
+1000000000000
Can’t they still pass on the land as an inherited property under prop 13 assessments? Just the newly built house would then qualify for a current assessment. The land is the most expensive part of property there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.
+1000000000000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.
Looks like reparations will be paid after all. By large, it’s white families really profiting immensely from Prop 13.
I believe this catastrophe will be a wake up call for the state about the property taxes. They’ve already completely destroyed the school systems through the lack of funding, and now essential services like fire not being up to par should get people wondering about changing the laws. All the newcomers to the state over the past couple of decades have been paying a massively outsized tax burden while some people profit. That really isn’t equitable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.
Looks like reparations will be paid after all. By large, it’s white families really profiting immensely from Prop 13.
I believe this catastrophe will be a wake up call for the state about the property taxes. They’ve already completely destroyed the school systems through the lack of funding, and now essential services like fire not being up to par should get people wondering about changing the laws. All the newcomers to the state over the past couple of decades have been paying a massively outsized tax burden while some people profit. That really isn’t equitable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.
Looks like reparations will be paid after all. By large, it’s white families really profiting immensely from Prop 13.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m watching a lot of the news and struck by how the celebrity/mansion /multimillion dollar homes aspect of the story is pushed. There are also lots of people who have lived there for decades and have otherwise typical middle class lives who have lost homes or are at risk.
My stepmother home is gone. 1800 sq ft 2 bdrm that she bought in 1975 for 78k. She was dropped by her insurer last year and was in the process of getting fair plan insurance and they were taking forever to underwrite. She and my dad moved to a retirement community (fortunately)but she kept her home and had been thinking about renting, selling etc.
My mom’s home (and my childhood home) is now in mandatory evacuation zone. They bought a small ranch in 1972 for 68k and she stayed. It is very modest home for the neighborhood but there are many others like it. Fortunately I got my mom to leave recently and move close to me and rent it out because she could no longer live alone (dementia)…(my sibling refused to sell because of taxes, which was stupid. I wanted her to have easy access to capital so she could get the best care… I have been worried about fire since a 2019 wildfire which was a very close call and she was at that time developing dementia and I knew she would not know what to do the next time.)
The house is her only asset and the rent pays for memory care. I’m thankful she’s not there and aware of what’s happening.
My stepsister is on the edge of the evacuation zone, in a modest home with a couple animals. She is a researcher and can only afford to live there because her dad (a schoolteacher) left her the home when he died. She’s nervous like everyone else and is currently housing a friend who probably lost their home in topanga.
I’m grateful that everyone in my family is ok but I just don’t know what all these people will do. The super rich will have options but for many people those options are simply out of reach.
Someone who purchased a home in what is now a VERY expensive neighborhood is doing extremely well. $78k?! Let me guess, the home is at least $2 million?
Sorry but middle class people don’t live in 2 million dollar properties.
In positive news the land value is way more than the structure
Meanwhile paying next to nothing in property taxes and hoping to pass than on to one kid so they can continue not paying their fair share. Sorry they lost their home but this racket has to end.