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Padilla hopes to increase firefighter pay, create affordable housing for disaster response

As firefighters continue to battle the Los Angeles County fires, California Sen. Alex Padilla is introducing a series of bills to increase pay for firefighters and provide housing for those affected by the disaster. It has been submitted. This could later further increase the state’s affordable housing supply.

“Just like the firefighters who are on the scene right now, we must help with the response and recovery,” Padilla told the Times in an interview in his U.S. Senate office.

His suggestion is Disaster Housing Reform Act for American Familiesbrings together two of California’s top priorities: wildfire assistance and affordable housing.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency plans to provide trailers and other temporary housing to many of the thousands of people who lost their homes in the wildfires. Padilla’s bill, co-sponsored by Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana), would require the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Housing and Urban Development to provide long-term, affordable, functioning housing. The content requires prompt establishment. housing.

“We can be a little smarter about this and allow the use of modular housing, manufactured housing, which is itself a little more sustainable and more resilient,” he said. “Once the disaster is over and people start returning to their communities, we may be able to utilize them and keep them local for affordable housing.”

Padilla said the measure could serve as “another tool in the toolbox,” noting that some landlords have already raised prices in the wake of the fires.

Another measure is to Act on securing funds for firefighting operationswould expand funding from FEMA for firefighting tools installed before a disaster. This bill would allow FEMA to better cover these resources during periods of high wildfire risk and before a disaster occurs.

“We know that in California, when it’s hot and dry and windy, disasters happen. So we can predict those conditions. We have the right people and equipment in place just in case.” Let’s start putting them in place,” Padilla said, adding that he is checking the progress of the fire hourly on the WatchDuty app. “If we can ensure that this program recovers at least 75% of that, that’s a big incentive for state and local governments to do it without worrying too much about their budgets.”

Padilla recalled a trip he took with the former FEMA administrator to assess wildfire damage in 1996 as a staffer for the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.). Since then, he noted, leaders have learned a lot about fire prevention techniques, such as building with non-combustible materials and removing brush from homes.

Padilla also Wildland Firefighter Paycheck Protection ActThe bill, which would increase the pay of federal firefighters and include premium pay for firefighters who spend long hours fighting fires, was introduced in the last Congress but was not voted on. Firefighter pay has been the subject of legislation in recent years, with President Biden increasing the minimum wage for wildland firefighters from $13 to $15 an hour in 2021. Padilla’s bill aims to strengthen the Forest Service’s ability to recruit and retain firefighters. Promise higher pay.

According to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal firefighters earn, on average, slightly less than state and local firefighters. Unsurprisingly, California has the highest number of firefighters and the highest salaries of any state. According to a 2019 BLS study, the average annual salary in California was $84,370.