Los Angeles City Councilmember Bob Blumenfield, along with Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez, introduced “Building a Safer Los Angeles,” a motion to strengthen fire safety standards. On the heels of devastating fires throughout the area in recent years, the motion calls upon the City to “ensure that our growing multifamily housing stock is being constructed safely with skilled labor and is resilient in the face of growing threats from wildfires and other natural disasters.”
“The impact of Councilmembers Blumenfield and Rodriguez’s motion on fire prevention cannot be overstated,” says Kevin Lawlor, spokesperson for Build with Strength, a coalition of the National Ready Mixed Concrete Association. The coalition consists of community organizations, fire safety professionals, engineers, architects, and industry experts committed to strengthening the nation’s building codes and ensuring greater access to secure housing. “By ensuring that new mid- to high-rise construction can’t be built with stick framing in high-risk areas, this measure will make the entire city safer,” Lawlor said.
The motion calls for the expansion of Fire District No. 1, an existing planning and zoning overlay with provisions prohibiting certain types of construction, such as combustible framing. According to the motion, “it is time to revisit this tool and expand its reach to ensure that it captures the changing and growing regional centers and neighborhoods within the City of Los Angeles.”
Under the measure, Fire District No. 1 would expand to include three pre-defined areas: very high fire severity zones, high wind velocity areas, and areas with a population density of more than 5,000 persons per square mile, updated to reflect population growth every ten years according to the latest census results.
A study released by Urvashi Kaul, Consultant and Adjunct Assistant Professor at Columbia University, addresses the economic impact of wood-framed residential fires, particularly multi-family wood-framed structures. One of the two fires cited in the study, a 2014 blaze at the 1.3 million square foor Da Vinci apartment complex in Los Angeles, required 250 firefighters to extinguish and shut down the northbound 101 highway for several hours. At least four surrounding buildings were damaged by the fire, including some owned or leased by the City Government.
"Los Angeles could lose $22.6 billion in wood-framed residential fire losses over the next fifteen years," Professor Kaul estimates. While property damage accounts for roughly $20.5 billion of this figure, potential city expenditures could amound to $132.5 million, with $70.1 million going to police, fire, and sanitation departments, and another $62.4 million of indirect costs, such as remediation, insurance, and planning.
Build with Strength Los Angeles points to the devastating economic and human impact as reason for urgency in passing the ordinance to update the community’s building codes.
"Every person in the city has felt the economic and human impact of recent wildfires," says Lawlor. "Each day this measure remains in City Council is another day that leaves residents and families without its protections. Los Angeles needs action now."
Build with Strength Los Angeles includes a number of California organizations from a wide range of communities, including Asian Americans in Commercial Real Estate, the California Black Chamber of Commerce, Churches in Action, Clergy & Laity United for Economic Justice, Kol Tikvah, the Los Angeles Civil Rights Association, the Los Angeles Housing Partnership, the Los Angeles Shmira Civil Safety Patrol, the Los Angeles Urban League, The Soldiers Project, the Southern California Black Chamber of Commerce, and the Southern California Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.