Redefining expectations for urban water supply systems to fight wildfires
Gregory Pierce, Edith de Guzman, Megan Mullin | March 5th, 2025
When considering massive new costs for urban water systems to fight wildfires, we also need to look hard at the distribution of benefits from these investments, and design legal and fiscal cost recovery mechanisms that align with those benefits. In the service area for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, greatly expanding capacity for water supply and fire-flow for the highest-elevation areas of the city would be delivering a benefit to communities that are much wealthier, on average, than the rest of the city. There is danger of placing a burden on less-resourced households to pay for the protection of well-resourced households, which would compound existing and profound environmental inequities in the city.
Keywords
disadvantaged communities (DACs), infrastructure, planning and management, wildfire