power outages in California

NewCreation435

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"As hundreds of thousands of Californians grapple with a power shutoff intended to reduce the risk of wildfires, people affected by the outages say that their communities are racked by anxiety and frustration about the disruption — as well as fear that the complications associated with the outages outweigh the intended benefits.

“People are freaking out around here,” says Jeffery Stackhouse, a Livestock and Natural Resource Advisor from Fortuna, Calif who spoke with TIME along with his colleague, Lenya Quinn-Davidson, the area fire advisor with UC Cooperative Extension in Humboldt County, Calif., and director of the Northern California Prescribed Fire Council. They said the outages have fundamentally disrupted life in their community: Schools have closed, some businesses can’t run credit cards, people have lined up outside of gas stations to try and get fuel, and cars have been stuck in traffic jams as a result of traffic light outages."

https://time.com/5697684/california-power-outages-wildfires/

I am not sure how I would deal with this if I had to as so many things depend on having electricity such as using my cpap machine and other things. Do the costs outweigh the benefits of having these power outages?
 

tango

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"As hundreds of thousands of Californians grapple with a power shutoff intended to reduce the risk of wildfires, people affected by the outages say that their communities are racked by anxiety and frustration about the disruption — as well as fear that the complications associated with the outages outweigh the intended benefits.

“People are freaking out around here,” says Jeffery Stackhouse, a Livestock and Natural Resource Advisor from Fortuna, Calif who spoke with TIME along with his colleague, Lenya Quinn-Davidson, the area fire advisor with UC Cooperative Extension in Humboldt County, Calif., and director of the Northern California Prescribed Fire Council. They said the outages have fundamentally disrupted life in their community: Schools have closed, some businesses can’t run credit cards, people have lined up outside of gas stations to try and get fuel, and cars have been stuck in traffic jams as a result of traffic light outages."

https://time.com/5697684/california-power-outages-wildfires/

I am not sure how I would deal with this if I had to as so many things depend on having electricity such as using my cpap machine and other things. Do the costs outweigh the benefits of having these power outages?

It's a difficult question to answer, simply because the people who measure the benefits probably don't have to pay any of the costs while the people who directly pay the costs only get a theoretical concept of some benefit that is at best somewhat vague.
 
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