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Lots has changed over the years. I can't tell you how many empties I find under houses. That is unheard of now.Why are you builders building such toxic houses of horror in the first place? "Hey Rick, roll another coat of lead-based paint on there and we'll pound a sixer!"
Seems you can't follow your own advice.@Hal900
See, this is how you handle a troll. Don't feed them, and don't reply to them.
It's all about the feels with you trumpies, isn't it.People smoke cigarrettes. They do it, even though they know the risks.
You have a catastrophic, life changing event. You don't want to sit around, dwelling on it. You want to step in and get the healing process moving forward. A simple thing like cleanup. Maybe something that survived in that cleanup is precious to you. If you don't do it, sift through the rubble. You'll never know.
Is that because you've hired your own crew of illegals that you use to go into crawlspaces?Lots has changed over the years. I can't tell you how many empties I find under houses. That is unheard of now.
KMET? I would hear um pa pa ranchera music at jobsites. Of course I'm thinking of Pico Union.Lots has changed over the years. I can't tell you how many empties I find under houses. That is unheard of now.
Also radios. KMET used to blast from all radios on L.A. jobsites. Loud enough to hear over the skil saw.
I just saw the first jobsite in a while with a radio blasting. The super must have been off site.
This was in the 80's the laborers kept their hands off the radio.KMET? I would hear um pa pa ranchera music at jobsites. Of course I'm thinking of Pico Union.
Dolan fire moving east, Away from the coast. All of our longtime spots may still be there. Maybe there is a God. Willow Creek has the energy. The old timers who live around it. Peace...New spot fire detected near Mineral King.
Sequoia NP closed due to SQF Complex.
Yosemite NP closed due to smoke from Creek Fire.
SQF Complex Fire still growing and destroy parts of Sequoia NP.
Creek Fire still growing, mostly in north direction. Now at southern boundary of Yosemite.
Stick to payroll accounting. You are was waaaaay out of your lane.
As a certified lead mitigator, and a licensed building contractor, this is part of what I do. I guarantee you that a demo contractor will not be bringing that to a regular landfill/ recycling center.
I guarantee you, on the other end, that the little family cleaning their houses ashes will.
I guarantee you that the clean up contractor won't just pick it up with a bobcat, with no ppe and no dust mitigation, and just dump it in a dumpster.
http://instagr.am/p/CE5AaYSpVmS/My Brother-in-Law's roomie has family from the SC mountains. She spends a lot of time there.
Their house was spared, but they have no running water or electricity because the fire damaged all of the infrastructure. THey've relocated to their kid's place in LA.
I'm still not sure what this has to do with my post, but I hope it brings you joy. Thanks for derailing the threadYou'll get it
Baldo studied forestry at UC Berkeley in the 1970s and co-founded the Willits Redwood Co. sawmill, which initially processed thinnings salvaged as a byproduct of forest management activities but now buys high-quality redwood from scattered private property owners.
Baldo put it as a failure of his generation — “us 70 somethings” — for not taking a forward-looking approach to the forests that would have protected the old-growth forests, historic homesteads and communities from mega fires.
Baldo said the formula is clear: prescriptive fires, reducing undergrowth and taking bold steps as a country toward slowing the pace of climate change.
“We have all the money, all the college degrees, all the power in Sacramento and Washington, and we can't agree on what is reality and how to make decisions, however difficult, that benefit future generations and the planet,“ Baldo said.