Advertisement

California faces costly cleanup after wildfires

The Valley fire caused tremendous destruction in Middletown, Calif., in September.

The Valley fire caused tremendous destruction in Middletown, Calif., in September.

(Marcus Yam / Los Angeles Times)
Share

California is reaching deeper into its pocket to cover the costs of this year’s devastating wildfires.

Gov. Jerry Brown’s Department of Finance said Friday that it would pull $83 million more from a reserve fund to pay for debris removal. The Valley and Butte fires, which tore through Northern California in September, burned more than 140,000 acres and destroyed hundreds of homes.

The withdrawal announced on Friday comes after $55 million in unanticipated costs from earlier this year.

Advertisement

SIGN UP for our free Essential Politics newsletter >>

Administration officials expect more money will be needed, saying “the magnitude and complexity of these cleanup activities is unprecedented.”

They’re expecting to ask the Legislature for an additional $105 million in January, when lawmakers return to the Capitol after their recess.

Join the conversation on Facebook >>

Follow @chrismegerian for more updates from Sacramento.

For more political coverage, go to www.latimes.com/politics.

Advertisement

ALSO

What California stands to gain from Congress’ budget deal

Here’s how you spend $600,000 on 19 consultants in a Senate race

Bernie Sanders fights back after Democrats cut his access to voter files over data breach

Advertisement