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Planet Money

After the fires

23 Jan 2025

Description

The fires in Los Angeles are almost out. Residents are starting to trickle back into their burned-out neighborhoods. When they get to their houses, they face a series of almost impossible questions: Do we want to live here amongst all this destruction? And if we do, how do we even start?Today, we meet a father and son from Altadena who are confronting those choices. We pass through the National Guard checkpoints and enter the burn zone, where we see for ourselves all the challenges waiting for residents who want to rebuild. And we talk with an insurance adjuster about how the industry tries to value people's homes — and all of their possessions — after they have been reduced to rubble.For more on the California wildfires, check out our newsletter. We spoke with an economist who survived Oakland's wildfires in 1991 and has big ideas for how to rescue California from its insurance doom spiral.This episode of Planet Money was hosted by Sarah Gonzalez and Nick Fountain. It was produced by James Sneed and edited by Keith Romer. It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez and engineered by Neil Tevault with help from Gilly Moon. Alex Goldmark is Planet Money's executive producer.Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Audio
Transcription

Full Episode

1.243 - 13.329 Narrator

This is Planet Money from NPR. Have you been able to go back to your house?

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13.87 - 18.152 Aaron Abdushakor

I was able to go back to my house that Wednesday, Wednesday after.

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19.172 - 22.294 Narrator

The Wednesday after the big fires started in Los Angeles.

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22.921 - 28.084 Aaron Abdushakor

Yes, I was able to go back to my home, which was demolished.

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29.085 - 33.047 Narrator

It's like fully burned down to... Burned down to the ground.

33.067 - 40.812 Aaron Abdushakor

Yeah, there's no evidence of a stove, refrigerator, bathtub, a sink. Those things don't exist. It was flat.

41.412 - 50.458 Jahad Abdushakor

This is Aaron Abdushakor. He saw it. He saw it. I have not seen it myself. And that is his son, Jahad Abdushakor.

50.818 - 51.879 Nick Fountain

It was his childhood home.

52.335 - 57.517 Jahad Abdushakor

It's my home home, yeah. Grew up there. Yep. It's ashes.

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