Due to the January forest fire, the highest cost of life has become an important concern in America’s biggest problem, which is one of the biggest problems that bother Los Angeles County residents.
A survey focuses on the county, which is the country’s largest 9.7 million people, also showing concerns about the latest round of the Trump administration’s efforts to deport migrants and the permanent issue of displacement.
The annual survey of the UCLA Loskan School of Public Affairs creates the quality of the life index. No change in QLI this year, but in the last year of QLI’s existence, the score of 53 matches was the lowest. The survey has affected this lower point in three of the last four years.
In addition to the standard questions included in the QLI survey, questions were added this year that LA was touching on the Wild Fire.
In this survey, the collective trauma of the January forest fire in the Pacific Palacedes and Altadina communities has spread far more than expected, the effects of which have been felt in the County from northern county to South Bay.
More than two people in the survey said they knew the fire -hit person, while 14 % said that the real loss of the income caused by the fire had personally made a huge contract on them, and 13 % said it had implemented to some extent.
The majority of the county residents (89 %) believe that house owners who have lost their property from the fire should be allowed to be rebuilt at the same place. The same question was asked in 2019 in 2019 after the Volksha Fire near Sami Valley, and 76 % agreed to allow rebuilding at the same place. Poulud is about half of these (52 %) are willing to increase taxes to fund the jungle fire response.
This year, the cost of cost has risen to its advanced level, three -quarters of respondents have said that this is the most important category that affects their standard of living with all other people. According to the organizers of the survey, it is an important factor in which the QLI score has not changed from the previous year.
An important percentage of county residents (44 %) fears that he, his family or a friend’s member could be deported by federal authorities. Latin (54 %), residents age 18-29 (57 %) and 30-39 (52 %) are the most important of this concern. The survey consisted of 1,400 LA County residents and was conducted from February 23 to March 9.
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