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BlueWaveNeverEnd

(10,199 posts)
Mon Sep 23, 2024, 11:03 PM Sep 23

Palos Verdes landslide keeps getting worse. Trump's golf course is a mile away. He wants gov to help

Palos Verdes landslide keeps getting worse. Residents’ anger boils

Keefer can only describe the last few weeks in their Rancho Palos Verdes neighborhood as a nightmare.

Cut off from vital utilities for more than a month while living on the active landslide whose limits have yet to be determined, Keefer and his wife have seen their lives upended by the escalating emergency in ways they never could have foreseen.


Beyond the closed roads, damaged homes and transformed landscapes caused by the devastating and ongoing land movement, they have found themselves struggling to safely store food and secure stable power while running repeatedly to the gas station for more ice and propane to keep their house, and lives, afloat.

“We have scrambled,” Keefer, 67, said. “Not only is it stressful emotionally, but it’s stressful financially.”

Amid the long list of challenges now accompanying daily life in their Portuguese Bend community, the predominant feelings among many residents are mounting anxiety and frustration — and even anger — over a lack of responsibility, answers or assistance from anyone in charge.

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-09-22/palos-verdes-landslide-spreading-residents-frustrated-angry

On top of losing utilities, residents of 146 homes in the Portuguese Bend neighborhood — including Keefer and his wife — lost their landline internet connections when Cox Communications disconnected its service this month.

“It’s scary because it’s bigger than anything anyone imagined,” said Sallie Reeves, who has been trying to figure out how to safely remain on her Portuguese Bend property despite the lack of utilities — not to mention the massive fissure that runs through her home of more than 40 years. Before this winter, she and her husband had never seen any landslide damage on their property.


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https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-09-13/trump-palos-verdes-landslide

Trump, in Rancho Palos Verdes, says his golf course is ‘very solid’ despite nearby landslide


Standing on his golf course less than a mile from the Rancho Palos Verdes landslide zone where hundreds of homes are without gas and electricity, former President Trump on Friday called his property “very solid” and called on the government to help the troubled city.

“It’s a very wealthy area, but you also have people living here that are elderly and have fixed incomes and have houses that are gonna be, ya know, shoved into the Pacific Ocean if something’s not done,” the former president said.

Trump spoke to reporters at a campaign-related news conference at his seaside Trump National Golf Club Los Angeles, which he bought from bankrupted developers in 2002 after the 18th hole slid into the ocean.

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nini

(16,715 posts)
2. Most of those people knew the risk when they bought up there
Mon Sep 23, 2024, 11:15 PM
Sep 23

I’ve lived in the area my whole life and it’s always been a known problem with constant road work in the area for slippage yet people still bought homes. I just can’t muster up any sympathy. Anyone who bought before it was obvious are the ones who should be helped as they couldn’t have known.

BlueWaveNeverEnd

(10,199 posts)
4. I think they want the government to shore up the hills... which would be at an astronomical cost for only hundreds
Tue Sep 24, 2024, 12:29 AM
Sep 24

of people. I don't see anyway to resolve this.

nini

(16,715 posts)
8. A road a bit south in San Pedro fell into the ocean about 15 years or so ago.
Tue Sep 24, 2024, 12:44 PM
Sep 24

It wasn’t rebuilt because the area is unstable and that’s just the way it is. We can’t spend billions of dollars on bandaid solutions, so those tax hating hill folks are just going to have to figure something else out.

PJMcK

(22,887 posts)
7. Agreed
Tue Sep 24, 2024, 07:19 AM
Sep 24

There’s a similar problem in NC’s Outer Banks. Many homes have been consumed by the ocean as erosion has erased much of the shoreline exposing big expensive vacation homes to the surf.

It’s hard to feel sympathy since the dangers from erosion and sea rise have been known for many years. In the end, there’s not much to be done for these homes as nature is more powerful than humans.

LauraInLA

(1,306 posts)
3. I honestly have no idea what we would do if we found ourselves in this situation. Apparently CA insurance
Mon Sep 23, 2024, 11:27 PM
Sep 23

does not cover any type of earth movement (not just earthquakes) so these people will lose their homes without any money to help move elsewhere.

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