99% Invisible - Not Built For This #2: The Ripple Effect
Episode Date: August 23, 2024In disasters where a lot of people lose their homes, the impacts are not confined to a single city or town. They ripple outward, cascading into the surrounding area, as the survivors are forced to go ...looking for new places to live. This is the story of what happened after the famous fire in Paradise, California, and where many of the survivors ended up. It’s a cautionary tale about a town caught in the cross hairs of both the climate crisis and the housing crisis, and what happened when thousands of displaced people showed up on its doorstep.Not Built For This is a 6-part mini-series from 99% Invisible, with new episodes on Tuesdays and Fridays in the 99% Invisible feed. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to ad-free new episodes and get exclusive access to bonus content.
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Before we get started, just a quick note.
Our story this week is about the aftermath of a wildfire in Northern California.
As we were putting the final touches on this episode, a new wildfire started burning in
the same region where our story takes place.
The Park Fire is one of the largest wildfires in California history and has displaced thousands
of people.
It won't be a major part of our story today, but we wanted to say here at the outset
that our hearts are with the people of Butte County
and the surrounding area,
who are once again struggling with the impacts
of a mega fire and all that will come after it.
Okay, here's episode two of Not Built For This,
The Ripple Effect.
At a city council meeting in Chico, California, in October of 2018,
a man named Peter walked up to the podium.
He was wearing a black tank top, and he seemed frustrated.
I've been looking for housing, looking for housing, looking for housing.
I have tried. I've gone through behavioral health.
I've gone through 2-1-1. I've gone through behavioral health, I've gone through 2-1-1,
I've gone through the housing authority, give me all these lists.
All it does is waste my time because it's a list of apartments either I don't qualify for
or they're already rented.
He was almost shaking by this point, trying to convey just how hard he'd been trying to find a place to live. Every Monday I get them at 9 o'clock and I call you and it's already gone.
Are you freaking kidding me?
I live in this field between Walmart and that car lot.
But Peter was not telling the people on the Chico City Council anything that they did
not already know.
It was obvious to anyone who was paying attention that the city, really
the entire county, was having a very hard time keeping roofs over people's heads.
There was very little housing opportunity, in fact no effective housing opportunity for
lower income households.
Ed Mayer is the former executive director of the Butte County Housing Authority.
He was actually the person in charge of giving vouchers to people like Peter.
And he knew full well that there was hardly anything for them to use those vouchers on.
We saw a lot of elderly coming in and we saw a lot of homeless coming in that we
just were unable to help at all.
So the situation was dire.
Do you remember the vacancy rate by any chance?
Most housing experts agree
that a healthy rental vacancy rate
is somewhere between six and 8%.
I think the effective vacancy rate was half percent or below.
It was that bad.
I've never seen a housing market in my career that bad.
I've never seen a housing market in my career that bad.
There were not enough homes to buy or rent or even shelter beds to crash for a night.
You could be forgiven for thinking that things couldn't get any worse.
But that would be wrong because Butte County was about to lose a massive chunk of its most affordable housing stock.
It was about to lose the entire town of Paradise.
Starting on November 8th of 2018, an enormous wildfire began ripping through the forested foothills around Paradise.
Wildfires are often named for the nearest road from which they were first reported.
This fire started off of Camp Creek Road, which gave it a spectacularly understated name,
the Camp Fire.
The Camp Fire is the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California's history.
As the fire burned paradise to the ground, Ed was at his office in Chico, about 15 miles
away.
He was trying to get a handle on just how many homes had been lost throughout the county.
At some point, he got an email from a colleague estimating 14,000.
And I went, oh my goodness, and I thought 14,000,
and I roughly did the math very quickly in my head.
Number of people per household, three people per household,
that's 45,000.
Somewhere between 35,000, 45,000 people have been displaced.
I burst into tears.
The fire was contained after a couple of weeks,
but Ed's problems were just beginning.
He had already been struggling to find housing for the most vulnerable people in the county.
How on earth was he supposed to conjure up homes for the 45,000 people who had suddenly been made homeless?
To be in a business where housing was that difficult to start,
and then to have that kind of thing hit your community
was just, it was brutal.
Someday, we'll probably be able to see clear trends
in climate migration.
Over time, it's likely that millions of people
will move northward and away from the coasts.
But the reality right now is much more chaotic.
Most people aren't migrating intentionally.
They're being displaced by escalating fires and floods and extreme storms.
And then they have to figure out where to go in a housing landscape that is often not
ready to receive them.
Most of the stories about the Camp Fire have understandably focused on Paradise, the beloved town with the iconic name that was nearly wiped off the map.
But the nearby city of Chico was also transformed by the fire.
Because in disasters where a lot of people lose their homes, the impacts are not contained
to a single city or town.
They ripple outward, cascading into the surrounding area, as the survivors are forced to go looking
for new places to live.
This is the story of what happened
after the famous fire in Paradise.
It's about two women
from very different economic backgrounds,
struggling in very different ways
to find a place to live in the aftermath of disaster.
And it's about a town caught in the crosshairs
of both the climate crisis and the housing crisis.
And how the people there reacted when thousands of displaced climate migrants showed up on their doorstep.
Because Chico, California was not built for this.
I'm Emmett Fitzgerald.
this. I'm Emmett Fitzgerald.
Chico is a small city at the edge of California's Central Valley, where the northern Sierra foothills meet the flat agricultural plains. It's a relatively
wealthy college town in a relatively poor farming county. Summers in Chico are
hot and getting hotter every year.
But there are all these creeks that run right through
the center of town where people can cool off.
Chico has a yo-yo museum,
a really high number of breweries per capita,
and a bustling farmers market
where you can buy a beaded bracelet
from a white lady with dreadlocks
or locally grown pomegranates.
When I first came to Chico, I thought I had died and gone to heaven. It had everything. I mean,
I loved the community. The music was insane. I mean, I just loved it.
Susan Dobre came to Chico in the 90s to teach in the English department at Chico State.
The job didn't end up working out, but she stuck around because she loved the city so much.
She met a skinny guitar player named John Michael,
and she moved in with him and his son, Skyler.
John Michael and I, at that point,
you know, we were raising Skyler,
we had fallen in love,
we decided to try to buy a house together.
So we went looking and couldn't find anything in Chico
that we could afford.
Housing in Chico was pricey even back then.
And so historically, a lot of people who worked in Chico would live about 20
minutes outside of town up on the ridge in smaller, more affordable communities
like Concau, Megalia and Paradise.
When we went up to Paradise and found out that literally the houses were like
a hundred thousand000 cheaper than in
Chico.
And we started looking up there.
This is a common story throughout California.
As the cost of living has soared, people have gotten pushed out of expensive cities and
into the forested hills outside of town.
And in the mid-2000s, Susan and John Michael found an affordable fixer-upper in Paradise.
You know, we love that house and we put so much into it, so much love into it,
and so much to see it go from the crap that it was to the beautiful house that we made it into.
John Michael's a genius contractor.
Susan and John Michael lived in that house for over a decade, and they made a life for themselves up on the ridge.
They found friends through the Paradise Grange,
an old venue in town that hosted concerts
and open mic nights.
They liked living in paradise.
Even though there wasn't a lot of racial diversity,
there were people from very different classes
and cultures living side by side.
Ranchers and hippies, artists and weed farmers,
people who had just bought their first home,
and people who had nowhere else to go.
Like Crystal Johnson.
I think people live up there for the serenity of life.
The serenity of the hills, the nature.
That's where my serenity was.
Crystal Johnson moved up to the ridge in 2017,
and her situation was very different from Susan's.
Before that, she had been homeless for a bit,
after losing an apartment that she shared
with her ailing mom.
She was not in a great place and needed a reset.
Honestly, I went up there to go find myself,
to find out what my purpose is
and what I should be doing next
and maybe get my shit together
and go back to school or get my teeth done.
Crystal got a job at a trailer park not far from paradise.
She says she worked as an on-site manager, kind of like a super, and in exchange she
got a free place to live.
She spent her day cutting firewood for the residents and handling a seemingly endless
stream of maintenance requests.
It was busy, busy, busy.
There was no rest for me.
But it made her happy.
She found a sense of purpose working at the park.
It felt good to have her own needs taken care of
and be able to focus on helping other people.
It just made my heart feel whole, like the Grinch,
when he had that little tiny heart and it grew so big.
For Crystal, the free housing and the job at the trailer park provided a crucial platform
of stability that she'd been struggling to find.
And by 2018, it felt like her life was finally moving in the right direction.
Meanwhile, Susan Dobre was still living in paradise with John Michael.
She was commuting back down the hill into Chico to teach a class
on global issues at the university. And one of the first units that she organized that
year was on climate change.
And I really, I have to admit, the strange thing was that I was thinking of it as a future
problem at that time, you know, because it was like in 50 years, this is what's going
to happen. And if we don't do this by 2050, it was kind of very oriented towards, you know, what was
going to happen down the line.
But then climate change got a lot more present tense.
You know, it just kind of came roaring up to my back door.
Fire is a natural part of the landscape of Northern California.
And for centuries, indigenous people used fire intentionally to manage the forests of
the Sierra Foothills and reduce the buildup of dead material.
But in the 20th century, these cultural burning practices were replaced with the aggressive
fire suppression tactics of the US Forest Service.
This resulted in forests that were essentially filled
with kindling that was ready to burn.
And then you add climate change to the equation.
All across the Western US were seeing a growing number
of days in a given year that have the right conditions
for extreme fire.
And a lot of these new fire weather days
are happening in the late fall.
Typically, Northern California can expect
a good soaking rain by November,
which effectively brings an end to that year's fire danger.
But in 2018, the first winter storms
were stubbornly behind schedule.
And following one of the hottest summers on record, the landscape was
kiln dry.
How aware of wildfire as an issue were you in Paradise?
Yeah, we were very aware we thought.
Firerisk was not some great secret in Paradise. The town wasn't on the edge of the forest.
It was built right among the dug firs and the ponderosa pines.
But Susan and John Michael were never
particularly stressed about fire.
Their house wasn't at the end
of some back country dirt road.
They had neighbors all around them,
and they felt a false sense of suburban safety.
A couple of weeks before the fire,
we said, it's never going to get to us.
We're in a neighborhood.
They had actually just gone to a fire safety workshop
at the Paradise Grange, where they learned all about the town's
evacuation protocol.
They learned that in order to control traffic,
every neighborhood had been given a zone.
And on the day, if the fire happened,
you're supposed to turn on your emergency radio station
and wait for your zone to be called.
You know, there was a plan.
The campfire erupted on the morning of November 8th.
It was a classic fire weather day with a hot, dry, ominous wind whipping down off the western slope of
the Sierras. Susan had gone to a doctor's appointment early that morning and when
she got out of her car she saw a bunch of people in the parking lot pointing at
the sky. And there's a big glow in the sky like bigger than any like a sunrise
right there's a big glow and I said, is that a fire? They said, yeah.
I said, well, wow, that's big.
And they said, yeah, and it's windy.
Yeah.
Earlier that morning, a piece of equipment
belonging to the power company PG&E
had malfunctioned near the town of Polga.
It sparked a small blaze,
but it didn't take long for the 30 mile an hour winds
to whip up an inferno.
When she got home, Susan turned on the radio.
This is an emergency notification
for the town of Paradise.
The voice on the radio said that they were evacuating
certain neighborhoods in Paradise, but not her zone.
Zones one, five, 12, 15 are to be evacuated.
Please stand by for other zones.
But then she noticed that her next door neighbors
were leaving in their RV.
And they couldn't get out onto the road.
And that's the first time I noticed, wow, there's traffic.
There's traffic, there's a line of traffic on the road.
And just then the electricity went off.
Susan turned on her car radio so she could keep listening as they got ready to leave.
And that's the first time I realized and noticed that I turned it on at 8 o'clock.
It's now 11.15.
This is the same message that's been playing.
Zones 1, 5, 12, 15 are to be evacuated. Please stand by for other zones.
The emergency message was playing on a loop.
They've abandoned the emergency station.
That cannot be good.
That can't be good.
So then I said, OK, honey, we got to get out of here.
They pulled the car out of the driveway
and went absolutely nowhere.
It was bumper to bumper traffic.
Like we got maybe 500 yards in 45 minutes,
and now it's noon, it's black as night.
You can see the glow of the fire, you know,
off in the distance.
There was no way to know if the traffic was going to improve.
And so Susan and John Michael ducked into a church parking lot to figure out a plan.
Susan actually had a brochure from the fire training that she had gone to a couple of
weeks before, and she pulled it out.
It was like they had a checklist.
Do this, do this, do that, do that.
I'm just struck by the fact that you're in the midst of the biggest crisis of your life
and you're reading a brochure.
I know, because we had just gone to the workshop, right?
Except the brochure said that if they couldn't get out,
they should lie on the ground, put a blanket over their head,
and shelter in place.
Susan was not particularly excited about this idea.
It seemed like such a last resort kind of move.
I looked at John Michael's out, are we going to do this?
He said, no.
I said, OK, what are we going to do?
There was no way to get anywhere in a car, but John Michael thought he knew a back trail
through the woods that would take them to a larger parking lot that would feel a lot
safer.
And so we just took what we could on our backs, took the dog, forgot my phone.
He took his ukulele so we'd have something to do.
And we walked down the road to cut through the woods
to get over to a holiday market parking lot.
And the only time I think really that we were afraid
was as we were going through that woods,
we didn't know if there was gonna be fire on the other side
or if we could get trapped in the woods by fire, we didn't know if there's gonna be fire on the other side or what the you know if we could get trapped in the woods by fire we didn't
know so we stopped and I said honey this is what all our spiritual practice has
been about this is our last day now I'll see you on the other side
well Susan and John Michael were hiking through the woods crystal was battling
traffic on the one road off the ridge. The news
of the fire had come earlier at her trailer park. A police officer showed up around 11 in the morning
and just told them to get the hell out of there. The sheriffs came through there saying,
get out of here. mandatory evacuation to all of paradise. Get people moving now. Get down to Chico
or get down to wherever you can get to.
Doesn't matter which roads you take, just go.
Crystal and a group of neighbors piled into an old RV
and headed down the Skyway, the main road out of town.
We've got the fire coming downtown Skyway,
where it's Skyway and Moppy.
We've got the road completely blocked.
Somebody needs to be able to open it up and get people out of here.
The whole ride out of there just seemed like we're in the towering inferno.
The sky was nothing but flames all around us.
It's like these big old fireballs just shooting everywhere.
There just weren't enough roads for everyone up there
to evacuate all at once.
But after several hours stuck in the most terrifying traffic
jam of her life, Crystal finally made it down off the ridge
safely.
Oh my god, I can't believe we're alive.
Back up the hill, Susan and John Michael somehow managed to find a safe path through the woods,
carrying John Michael's ukulele.
And they ended up in a different parking lot, outside of a holiday market, where they were
met by a bunch of Cal Fire officials.
We went up to one of them and said, what do we do?
And he said, stay here, you'll be safe here.
This parking lot was safer than the last one.
And visually, it was kind of shielded
from the worst of the fire.
And so as the afternoon dragged on,
Susan and John Michael didn't really
have a sense for how bad things had gotten.
At the end of the day, the county sheriffs
came and picked them up.
Can we take you down to Chico, ma'am?
And I was like, you know, we'd like to just go back to our house if it's all the same
to you.
And they're like, they looked at me like I was out of my mind and say, no, there's fire
everywhere, ma'am.
I said, really?
Okay.
So I thought, all right, they may have to do this, you know, so we get in the car with
them and not two blocks away.
Every direction that you look is flames.
Just everything. You look all the way down this way.
Nothing. It's like a disaster set from a movie.
So many people evoke movies when they're trying to describe what it feels like
to be in the middle of a disaster like the Camp Fire.
I think it's because there's really nothing from day-to-day life
that could possibly serve as a point of comparison.
The fire was just too intense for normal language, too otherworldly.
And the level of destruction really was the stuff of alien invasions.
Nearly the entire town was incinerated that day, turned to white ash.
Susan and John Michael lost their home and everything in it. Somehow Susan's car, which they abandoned at that first church parking lot, survived.
Although one side of it got all melty. She never got it fixed, still drives it around like a badge of honor.
Crystal also lost most of her possessions that day. The trailer park where she lived and worked partially burned during the fire.
And she was so traumatized by her experiences
that she never wanted to go up on the ridge again.
All three of them though, were lucky to make it out alive.
85 people died in the campfire.
But even before the extent of that tragedy was fully understood, it was clear that another
disaster was starting to unfold.
One that would impact Susan and Crystal in very different ways.
That's coming up after the break. The campfire displaced roughly 50,000 people from the ridge above Chico.
And over time, the diaspora of fire survivors fanned out across the country.
People moved to be closer to family
or further away from their own trauma.
Researchers at Chico State have found fire survivors
in all 50 states, but the majority of people
did not go very far.
At least 15,000 of them ended up down the hill in Chico,
a town that was struggling
to keep its existing population fully housed,
grew by more than 15% in one day.
You know, we would have never imagined ourselves
to be walking down the street in Chico
without a place to go.
Hotels booked up immediately.
It was hard to get a room in Sacramento,
a city of half a million people that's 90 miles away.
And so Susan and John Michael found themselves
in a McDonald's, scrolling through their contact lists.
I was like, okay, what friends are gonna take us in?
You know, who can we ask this of?
Sometimes when I think about the fire,
I think about the metaphor of a staircase.
Everyone who was up on the ridge that day fell down the stairs.
But where you ended up depended a lot on what stair you started on.
For people at the top, they landed somewhere in the middle.
But for a lot of people who were already struggling with housing before the fire, they bottomed
out.
Susan and Crystal had very different trajectories in the aftermath of the fire, they bottomed out. Susan and Crystal had very different trajectories
in the aftermath of the fire,
and their paths diverged right away,
as they both had to figure out
where they were gonna sleep that night.
One of the biggest factors working
in Susan and John Michael's favor
was that they just had a lot of friends in Chico,
including one crucial friend named Athena.
And when we called her, she said,
oh my God, I've been calling you for hours.
Thank God you got in touch with me.
How are you guys doing?
Come to the house right away.
Come, you're going to stay here.
This is where you're going to stay.
Taking on a temporary housemate from Paradise
was a totally normal thing in Chico
in the aftermath of the fire.
At first, it was as if the town swelled through sheer generosity
to cram in as many new people as it could.
Fire survivors slept on friends' couches and camped in cousins' front yards.
Some people even stayed with strangers.
So what happened was, is, okay, everyone's here initially,
great outpouring of compassion,
everyone understands.
Here's Ed Mayer again, who ran the Butte County Housing Authority at the time.
If you were inclined, you could walk into any store in town, fill up your grocery basket
and walk out and no one would ask a question.
The people of Chico did not ask for thousands of new neighbors.
And yet early on, you could find kindness wherever you looked in the city,
even at the Walmart.
In the early days right after the fire, a lot of displaced people ended up in
the Walmart parking lot, which just so happens to be right across the street
from Ed's office at the Housing Authority.
Yeah, right across the street here we have the Walmart, and
right next to our Walmart,
I think it's about a 10-acre parcel that's vacant.
And the day of the disaster, that next morning,
woke up, there was that whole parcel,
and the Walmart parking lot was jam-packed,
full of tents and trailers and RVs and campers.
The Walmart Tent City became a clearinghouse for donations.
Well, we got you all covered.
In this video taken during the first week, you can see piles of toilet paper, blankets,
clothing and food, mostly donated by people in and around Chico.
We have our own Walmart outside of Walmart.
This is all what people in the community brought and dropped off.
And those donations were important because a lot of people had nothing, including Crystal.
After finally making it to Chico, her first stop was at a church where she was given a
free meal. She was with her teenage son.
We'd sit there and look at each other and think,
how are we going to do this?
How are we going to make money to get clothes?
Because we had nothing anymore.
Unlike Susan and John Michael, Crystal
didn't really have anyone in Chico she could stay with.
And so she and her son got on a bus that took them
to the fairgrounds in the nearby town of Gridley,
where the Red Cross was setting up a temporary sanctioned campground. Luckily, donations were already
piling up there too, and she was able to snag a free tent.
I had my tent when I was out there in a tent, in what they call tent city.
The Gridley Fairgrounds became a tent city run by the Red Cross and the kindness of strangers.
People would come by and give us gift certificates and this and that, whatever,
and everything was brand new. Nothing was used. Nothing. And to have all that new stuff,
it just warmed up my heart. Call me a sap, but I think that people are mostly good.
And in the aftermath of disasters,
you often see all that goodness turned up to 11.
But there are limits to how far individual acts of generosity
will go towards solving a giant systemic problem
like the one facing Chico.
People can't couch surf forever,
and unofficial tent cities
don't tend to last.
In the end, the Walmart encampment
only lasted a couple of weeks before it was closed down.
And then in January, two months after the fire,
the Red Cross closed up shop in Gridley.
Crystal and everyone else there were
told that they would also
need to move on.
Well, we were out there almost until the end when Red Cross picked up and left and just
weren't going to care for us out there anymore. So we all started packing up and leaving.
After a disaster, it's hard to pinpoint the exact moment when people go from being temporarily
displaced to just being homeless.
But this might have been that moment for Crystal.
I talked to a lot of social workers for this piece.
There was an army of homeless service providers
and disaster case managers in Chico
who were trying as hard as they could
to find everyone a safe place to live.
And they did help a lot of people.
But a lot of people ended up on the streets too.
Every year, homelessness advocates do what's called a point in
time count, where they fan out across the city and survey all of the unhoused
residents. They did the count that year in March, about four months after the
fire, and the results were chilling. Homelessness had increased all throughout
the city, and over a third of unhoused people
in Chico identified as campfire survivors. But the impacts of the disaster on the housing
market were really just beginning.
On the day of the fire, John Baird was glued to the TV.
He's a real estate agent in Chico, and at a certain point, he started doing the mental
math on what the disaster might mean for the real estate market.
And then over the course of the next three days, the real estate market here in Chico
was just bonkers.
The influence of the fire would ripple throughout the entire Chico housing market and affect
people at all income levels, even those at the very top.
Paradise was not a wealthy community, but there were some people with means living up there.
People who had enough cash on hand to just purchase a new house
without waiting around for an insurance settlement on their old one.
And this class of people started buying up homes in Chico immediately, like that day.
It was just a mad dash to try to get homes.
And yeah, it was surreal.
You know, it was kind of a major daze
during the entire day, kind of like,
you could not believe this is happening.
Do you remember receiving calls that day?
Yeah, so I had just happened to list a home in Chico,
a really nice home that had been on the market and calling calls that day?
Campfire survivors. Oh every single one. Yeah, every single one of them were you know, I think we had around
165 homes on the market in Chico before that weekend
And after the weekend, they were virtually all sold
Housing prices in Chico spiked in the weeks following the fire and rents went up right along with them
by the end of the year, Reelitter.com declared Chico, quote, the hottest real estate market in the country, a twisted designation given the circumstances. This was the housing
landscape that beleaguered Campfire survivors were operating in as they tried to get back on their
feet. Here's Susan Dobre again.
Housing was just insane.
Everybody was having a hard time finding a place.
People had friends and stuff like that,
but it was like, okay, where am I gonna live?
After weeks crashing with friends
and then more time living in a different friend's rental,
Susan and John Michael started looking for a home to buy. They had gotten their insurance settlement and were ready for their next move. They didn't
want to rebuild in paradise, though. They wanted to stay in Chico. John Michael, in
particular, he was working through a lot of PTSD from the fire, and being in Chico made
him feel safe. He could ride his bike everywhere he needed to go,
which was great because every time he got stuck in traffic,
he felt like he was reliving the worst day of his life.
It doesn't matter where I'm at.
If I get in gridlock anywhere on the planet,
I'm not the same person.
It's like, turn around, we're out of here.
That's the kind of feeling.
So it felt good to be in Chico.
It felt safe, fire-wise.
Did you actually, like, look at houses in Chico?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We looked—we scoured for a year and a half.
At one point, John Michael had his eye on this sweet little spot with fruit trees and
a fireplace.
But when he and Susan went to the open house, it became clear that it was going to sell
for way above asking price.
By the time we walked up to the front porch,
we heard that the bidding had already gone up
above what we could handle.
Outbid there on the spot that morning?
Yeah, that happened a lot.
That happened a lot.
But it wasn't just fire survivors
who had to struggle in the post-fire housing market.
It was also really hard for renters in Chico because a lot of landlords took advantage
of the situation and jacked up the rent or just sold their house to the highest desperate
bidder.
You have people, homeowners, that were like, oh, well, they're in a prime situation to
sell their home now because people have insurance money to buy a new home.
Great.
I'm selling my home.
This is Hillary Crosby, executive director of the organization Safe Space Chico.
She says that a lot of renters ended up getting kicked out when their landlords sold.
And that only added to the number of people who were struggling on the streets of Chico.
That is people we see on the street that had their housing sold out from underneath them
because people saw an opportunity and I mean it is what it is but they took it and we are still in a housing crisis.
And all of those people who got displaced because of price gouging and eviction,
they didn't have many resources available to them. Ironically, those who lost their homes directly in the fire,
they got more help. It wasn't always easy to access, but there were FEMA payouts and
insurance and fire relief fundraisers, and eventually settlement money from PG&E, whose
faulty equipment started the fire. But people who lost their homes indirectly,
they didn't get any of that.
And so when you say, were you impacted by the campfire?
Well, that's a hard question to answer
because if you lost your housing, you weren't in the fire,
but your landlord sold your household from underneath you
and now you can't find any place for you and your family.
I feel that's disaster impacted,
but are there any resources for you?
Not necessarily.
A year and a half after the campfire,
there were still lots of survivors
who didn't have a place to live,
and many others who were struggling
with the high rents and evictions
that followed in the fire's wake.
All of that only added to the large population of people who were unhoused in Chico before
the fire.
But patience with all of the people on Chico's streets was starting to wear thin, and compassion
towards those who were still struggling began to run out.
Here's Ed Mayer again, the former director of the Butte County Housing Authority.
— Similarly to news cycles, attention spans, you know, people just get burned out after a while.
It's like, enough already, okay? I've dealt with the disaster. I'm—my life, I mean, get on with it.
— But not everyone was able to just get on with it.
Susan Dobre says that it was hard enough
for her and John Michael to piece their lives
back together after the fire.
And they had lots of things working in their favor,
a good insurance policy, lots of friends, each other.
Many fire survivors didn't have all that support.
I know many people in paradise
that are just hanging on by their fingernails already,
you know, and said something like this hits, I know many people in paradise that are just hanging on by their fingernails already, you
know, and something like this hits, you know, it wipes them out, it sets them back years
and years in their recovery from whatever it is they're recovering from.
Frustration with the large numbers of unhoused people in Chico began to simmer.
And then, during the early days of the pandemic, it
bubbled over.
The city stopped breaking up encampments during the COVID lockdown, and everyone I talked
to agreed that the encampments grew larger and more chaotic during this period.
Without garbage collection, the trash began to pile up, and a lot of people in Chico started
getting very upset
about the conditions inside their parks.
Over time, you started to hear a new story
getting told around town,
that the people living in the parks
were not fire survivors or even local to the area,
but that they were coming to Chico from all over
to take advantage of services. Here is City Councilman Sean Morgan in an interview with a local radio station.
The narrative that these are people from Chico and they're people from paradise and they're
down on their luck is absolutely, totally false.
I'm just going to jump in here to say that this is one of the most common and pernicious
myths about homelessness that local politicians
love to repeat.
That all of the unhoused people in their city are coming from somewhere else.
And the stragglers that just came to Chico, which is the great majority of them, because
it was convenient and it was easy and they heard somewhere I can get needles and drugs
and healthcare and free camping.
They need to go back where they came from. Unhoused people move around, just like everyone else. But researchers at UC San Francisco recently
put out one of the most robust surveys on homelessness in California and found that 75%
of unhoused people were living in the same county as when they last had a house. And Ed Maier says that the homeless point in time counts
in Butte County have had similar findings.
We've learned through our homeless point in time counts
that these are our citizens.
These are not people who've come from other places.
These are ours.
I wanna be really clear.
The majority of people in these parks
were not fire survivors.
But all of them were trying to find a place to live in the middle of a county-wide housing
crisis that had been deeply exacerbated by the fire.
And also, some of them were fire survivors, including Crystal Johnson.
Crystal was bouncing around a lot during this period.
She found a free trailer on Facebook,
which she parked behind a motel and lived in for a bit.
Then she got a room in the motel for a while
through a pandemic program, but that didn't last either.
And eventually she found herself back on the streets,
attracting unwanted attention.
We didn't have a place to shower or get bathed up.
And to not smell or have clean clothes or fresh water,
they started turning an eye on us.
Crystal says it felt like some people in Chico
started seeing her in a very different light.
No longer was she the victim of this horrible fire.
Now she was the problem.
Some people didn't even believe that she had lived up on the ridge at all.
But I have plenty of proof and it doesn't matter what they think. After a while, people say,
oh you're just another one of the local homeless people or transit people or no more campfire survivors.
For Crystal, it seemed like this crucial chapter in the complicated story of how she ended up in this situation was being erased.
And how can anybody judge another person when they haven't put their feet in their shoes and lived their life and what they've been through.
Some people are quick to judge them, and it's not right.
We've been out here because it's campfire.
Period.
But anger about the situation in the parks
was powerful in Chico,
and it coalesced into a political force.
Conservative city council candidates started running
on a promise to get tough on the encampments.
The campaign resonated with a lot of people,
and in November of 2020,
the conservatives flipped the city council.
And as soon as they got into power,
they made good on their electoral promises by evicting
a large encampment that had developed in one of the city's biggest parks.
Chico PD, park rangers, and even city staff came in with bulldozers and cleared up the
mess left by campers and homeless who've made this park their home.
Evictions like this went on for months.
Every time the police closed an encampment, a new one would pop up somewhere else, and
the city just kept whacking the mole.
Crystal remembers the feeling of getting moved again and again.
We were always on the go.
We just couldn't stay in one spot for too long.
Otherwise cops would show up and we'd be told we got so many days or so many hours
to move. Crystal was caught on a hamster wheel of displacement.
And every time she got moved, she had the same question for the cops.
Where were we supposed to go? They said, well, figure it out.
Okay. I've been trying to figure it out.
And it's not that easy.
Eventually, the situation in Chico got so bad for unhoused folks that a group of attorneys filed a class action lawsuit against the city, arguing that Chico
could not legally evict people from public space if they had nowhere else to go.
And a federal judge sided with the unhoused.
He put a permanent injunction on the city, ruling that Chico could no longer clear encampments
unless it could provide people with a spot in a shelter.
As part of a settlement agreement, the city agreed to build what they call the pallet
shelter.
If that sounds like the bare minimum of what counts as housing, that's because it kind
of is. It's a collection of 177 extremely tiny modular homes made by a
company called Pallet. And Crystal was one of the very first people offered a
spot.
Stuff just to make it feel like home.
People have little messages too.
Yeah.
Last year, producer Sophie Coddner and I visited the Pallet Shelter,
which is also known as Genesis.
And Crystal showed Sophie her tiny, tiny house.
It's a little messy out in front of my place right now though.
This your spot?
Yeah.
The shelter is a series of white boxes,
arranged in neat rows across a dusty lot,
like little storage units.
Each one is 64 square feet.
Yeah, it's really, really small.
It's basically the size of a jail cell.
Crystal and her son moved into the shelter the third day it was open.
After being checked in and everything, we go to our pallets and they gave us a sleeping
bag and a pillow and we walk in there and I just had all the weight that was on my shoulder
just gone.
It was gone.
It was just a relief.
The space was small, barely enough room for her,
let alone her son.
But she finally had a door she could close.
By this point, it had been more than three years
since Crystal had lost everything in the fire.
More than three years of not knowing whether she'd be able to sleep at night.
Not just because of the disaster, but because of how the system failed in its wake.
She was exhausted.
I crawled up there and just laid down just to see what it'd feel like and see if it
was comfortable or not.
I actually went right out.
I just went right to sleep.
I was so comfortable.
The pallet shelter is run by the Jesus Center, a soup kitchen in town.
There's a little office in the back with a team of friendly caseworkers who seem to know
every resident by name.
The shelter has been widely celebrated as a creative solution to Chico's problems.
But Ed Maier says that it's not getting to the root of the matter, which is the lack
of housing.
I simply say it this way, if I wanted to put every homeless person in a house, they don't
exist.
And that's the bottom line.
Chico faces many of the same obstacles to building affordable housing as other cities
in the country.
Many of the residential neighborhoods are zoned exclusively for single-family homes.
And every time someone tries to build a new apartment building,
there's fierce opposition from local NIMBYs.
But Ed is also feeling more hopeful than he has in years.
After the Campfire, a lot of federal funding poured
into Butte County for affordable housing.
When I spoke to Ed, he said that there were 3,000 new units
in the pipeline. It's a drop in, he said that there were 3,000 new units in the pipeline.
It's a drop in the bucket compared to what's needed. But to Ed, who has watched the county
struggle to build housing for decades, it doesn't feel that way.
It's like a tsunami of affordable housing units. So with one development, we took 41
households off the street.
Are you getting some campfire survivors in that?
Oh yes, absolutely.
Yeah, we see campfire survivors in everything we do.
We see them all the time.
When Crystal Johnson first got to the Pallet Shelter, she met with a case manager and got
put on a wait list for some of the new apartments being developed by the housing authority.
I want stability, I need stability. I have things I've got to get taken care of and I can't do that
without permanent housing. So it's like really urgent that it happens.
really urgent that it happens.
— Crystal has now been at the pallet shelter for over two years. But it's unclear how much longer she'll be able to stay.
A recent ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court gave city governments throughout the country
a lot more power to break up encampments without providing alternative shelter.
How that will impact the pallet shelter and the city of Chico's homelessness policies more broadly
is an active ongoing story. But whatever happens, Crystal is just hoping to find a permanent place to live, where she can start to put this whole chapter behind her. A chapter that she memorialized
with the most Northern California tattoo of all time.
It's a message to the company that sparked the fire.
Wait, will you describe that?
I'd say it's Mickey Mouse's hand in tie-dye
with the middle finger up showing the birdie,
and it says PG Neon in the middle finger up showing the birdie, and it says PG&E in the middle finger.
So you got a tattoo to say, f*** PG&E.
Yeah, pretty much.
Climate change is obviously not the singular cause of crystal situation.
It's not even the singular cause of the campfire.
But as the atmosphere heats up and the weather gets more volatile, it's exposing and exacerbating
the vulnerabilities that already exist in our society, particularly when it comes to
housing. In fact, I would argue that the climate crisis and the housing crisis are so deeply intertwined
at this point that you almost can't distinguish one from the other.
And one of the best ways to adapt to climate change is just to do a better job keeping
a roof over everyone's head.
The point is, is people are getting displaced or hurt out there and we need to figure out
a way to take care of them because these events are not going to stop happening and they seem
to be increasing in frequency.
In the past few years, there have been many more massive wildfires in Butte County, like
the Bear Fire and the Dixie Fire.
And while I record this, the hills above Chico are on fire yet again, as
the park fire burns through hundreds of thousands of acres northwest of Paradise. And every
time one of these big fires displaces a lot of people, some of them end up in Chico, where
there still isn't enough housing.
So we just have these disenfranchised, displaced people that are still here getting beat up
more and more and they're not going anywhere.
Nowhere is truly safe from climate change.
But some places are safer than others.
And when those places don't build enough affordable housing, it can create a vicious cycle where
people get priced out of relative safety and into the path of
climate disasters like wildfires.
And then, when a disaster predictably happens, there's nowhere for people to go.
And so they end up on the streets.
Or back in harm's way.
Yeah, I'm a slow walker up this hill.
Yeah, let's take our time.
Let's definitely take our time.
Yeah, look at just how green everything is.
And I imagine it gets even greener.
Emerald green everywhere.
Yeah.
After years of searching for a house
and getting outbid at every turn,
Susan and John Michael finally
found a place in Butte Valley, about 15 miles southeast of Chico.
It's a cozy little ranch house at the bottom of a grassy hill dotted with oak trees.
I visited them in the middle of a drizzly week in early December.
And as we hiked up the hill, I kept thinking, this place is amazing.
I would love to live here.
It's so beautiful.
It's really so incredibly beautiful.
It's just awesome.
I just love it.
I love the cool weather, the wetness.
Yeah, right.
It's so moist and verdant.
But if you've spent any time in California, you know that emerald green doesn't last.
At the end of May, this is all going to be brown, yellow grass, all the way till October,
end of October.
Susan and John Michael got burnt out of paradise, only to end up back in fire country.
John Michael wasn't that excited about this house at first.
Remember, he wanted to live in Chico where he felt safe,
but they just couldn't find a house they could afford there.
And they also didn't want to move too far away from all of the friends
who had helped them get through these difficult years.
And so this is where they ended up.
So in the beginning I was thinking, man, I don't want to be here.
Then I would love, you know,
then we'd see the stars at night
and how beautiful this place is.
I went back and forth and back and forth.
In the end, it was one conversation with Susan
that convinced him to give this place a shot.
Susan told me, honey, if we can't do this,
then we can't do this.
So she assured me that if, you know,
we reach a point where we can't live here
because it is really too dangerous,
then we'll just leave.
So she told me that,
and that made me feel more at ease, more safe.
Little by little, the two of them She told me that, and that made me feel more at ease, more safe.
Little by little, the two of them have been transforming the property. They planted gardens and orchards,
and then set about trying to make the house as fire-resistant as they could.
John Michael installed a fire suppression system,
and put on a new, state-of-the-art roof.
And against his own aesthetic judgment,
he covered up the beautiful old redwood siding
with cement paneling.
It took time and money, but he's feeling more at ease.
So it took me over a year, a couple of years,
to feel that feeling like we can be here and we'll be okay.
Because the fire's coming, just a matter of time.
Next time on Not Built For This,
all across the country there is an economic force that is threatening to drive people
away from areas of extreme climate risk.
Insurance.
The first policy we got was $2,400.
The second year it went up to $3,000.
The third year they wanted $7,600 almost.
In recent years, insurance rates have skyrocketed as companies try to cover increased losses
due to climate change.
And almost nowhere is that more true than in southwest Florida.
Everyone's having insurance issues and insurance has become a nightmare in Florida all the
way around. It once seemed like nothing could stop the Florida real estate machine.
But rising insurance rates are threatening to put a lot of Floridians financially underwater,
long before their houses are swallowed by the sea.
When we're stormed like that, I'm out.
You sell this damn own house, we're leaving. This episode of Not Built For This was reported and produced by me, Emmett Fitzgerald, with
additional reporting by producer Sophie Cotner.
The rest of the Not Built For This team is producer Jason DeLeon and managing editor
Delaney Hall.
Further invaluable editing from Christopher Johnson, Joe Rosenberg, Kelly Prime, and the
one and only Roman Mars.
Mix and sound design by Martin Gonzalez.
Theme and original music by George Langford from Actual Magic, with additional music by
Swan Rayal.
Fact checking by Sona Avakian.
Series art by Aaron Rayel. Fact-checking by Sona Avakian. Series art by Aaron Nestor.
A huge thank you to everyone who spoke with us for this story, especially
Crystal Johnson, Susan Dobra, and John Michael's son. If you want to see a video
of John Michael playing a song that he wrote about the fire, there is a link on
our website. In addition to everyone you heard from, I also want to thank Kate
Scow Smith, Jacqueline Chase, Mark Stehman, Addison Winslow, Bryce Goldstein, Laura Cuzzona,
Bob Troush, Dan Joseph, Jessica Giannola, J Rose, Tony Dunn, Amber Abney Bass, and Sophia at the Pallet Shelter.
Not Built For This is a six-part series from 99% Invisible.
New episodes will be coming to you in the 99PI feed on Tuesdays and Fridays, wherever you get your podcasts.
Kathy Tu is our executive producer. Kurt Kolstad is our digital director. The
rest of the 99PI team includes Chris Berube, Vivian Ley, Lasha Madan,
Gabriella Gladney, Jacob Maldonado Medina, and Nina Potuck.
The 99% Invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are a part of the Stitcher and SiriusXM podcast family.
You can find 99% Invisible on all
of the usual social media sites,
as well as our new Discord server.
There's a link to that and every episode of 99PI
and Not Built For This at 99pi.org.
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