Los Angeles Times

Audit: California disaster planning continues to forget people with disabilities

LOS ANGELES - California emergency officials are continuing to overlook the state's most vulnerable people, including those with disabilities, as they make preparations for inevitable wildfires, floods and other disasters, according to a state audit released this month.

Residents who don't speak English have been unable to find information in their language. Individuals who use wheelchairs or rely on electricity to power lifesaving equipment have found themselves unable to move and cut off from the outside world, trapped in part, the audit suggests, by state and county leaders' inability to think ahead for emergencies.

The 145-page audit focused on the emergency alert, evacuation and shelter plans in place for the California Office of Emergency Services and Ventura, Sonoma and Butte counties ahead of their respective wildfire disasters in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times2 min read
California-Mexico Border Hit By Second Earthquake Swarm In A Week. What Is Going On?
LOS ANGELES — Another earthquake swarm has been rumbling along the California-Mexico border. More than two dozen quakes greater than magnitude 2.5 have occurred since just after midnight Saturday, with epicenters about 175 miles southeast of downtown
Los Angeles Times9 min read
'Plays Still Matter To The Health Of Broadway': Leslie Odom Jr. On 'Purlie Victorious'
It's been three months since Leslie Odom Jr. last preached and schemed in "Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch," a project he'd been plotting since the 2016 night he won the Tony for his performance as Aaron Burr in "Ha
Los Angeles Times2 min read
Dolly Parton Pays Tribute To Dabney Coleman: '9 To 5' Co-star Was A 'Dear Friend'
Dolly Parton is mourning her co-star and longtime friend Dabney Coleman. "Dabney was a great actor and became a dear friend," the country music star wrote on Instagram. "He taught me so much when I was doing my first movie, 9 to 5." The pair met whil

Related Books & Audiobooks