11:25 am today

Los Angeles fire evacuees face price

11:25 am today
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 9: A unidentified woman looks at a house burned by the Palisades Fire on January 9, 2025 in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. Multiple wildfires fueled by intense Santa Ana Winds are burning across Los Angeles County. At least five people have been killed, and over 25,000 acres have burned. Over 2,000 structures have also burned and almost 180,000 people are under orders to evacuate.  (Photo by Apu Gomes/Getty Images)

A woman looks at a house burned by the Palisades fire on January 9, 2025 in the wealthy Pacific Palisades neighbourhood of Los Angeles, California. Photo: Apu Gomes / Getty Images

Days afer an inferno razed Pacific Palisades, Maya Lieberman is desperate to find somewhere to live. But unscrupulous landlords who are jacking up prices are making it hard.

"The price gouging is going haywire, it's obscene," the 50-year-old stylist told AFP. "I can't find anywhere for us to go."

Huge fires that have torn through Los Angeles since Tuesday have levelled whole neighbourhoods, turning swaths of the city to ash.

More than 150,000 people have been ordered to leave their homes as authorities try to keep down a death toll that has already reached 16.

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One blaze devastated Pacific Palisades, an upmarket enclave that was home to celebrities like Billy Crystal and Kate Beckinsale, which - until last week - was some of the most desirable real estate in the United States.

With the area now under a compulsory evacuation order, even those whose homes survived the inferno need to go elsewhere for the foreseeable future.

The higher-than-average incomes of people forced to leave homes there appear to have tempted opportunists, who see a chance to make money from others' misery.

"We put in an application at a house... that was listed at $US17,000 [$NZ30,000] a month, and they told us if we didn't pay $30,000, we weren't going to get it," Lieberman said.

"They told me they have people ready to offer more and pay cash. It's absolutely insane."

In this aerial view taken from a helicopter, homes burned from the Palisade fire smolder near the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, California on January 9, 2025. Massive wildfires that engulfed whole neighborhoods and displaced thousands in Los Angeles remained totally uncontained January 9, 2025, authorities said, as US National Guard soldiers readied to hit the streets to help quell disorder. Swaths of the United States' second-largest city lay in ruins, with smoke blanketing the sky and an acrid smell pervading almost every building. (Photo by JOSH EDELSON / AFP)

In this aerial view taken from a helicopter, homes burned from the Palisade fire smoulder near the Pacific Palisades neighbourhood of Los Angeles, California on January 9, 2025. Photo: JOSH EDELSON / AFP

'Price gouging is illegal'

Similar stories of apparent price gouging abound.

"I have friends who booked a hotel outside Los Angeles, and when they arrived there, they were asked for a higher price," said TV producer Alex Smith, who has been forced to leave his home.

The sharp practice has drawn the ire of California Attorney General Rob Bonta, who warned on Saturday there are laws against it.

"Price gouging is illegal. We will not stand for it. We will hold you accountable. We will prosecute," he told reporters, adding that those found guilty could land themselves a year in jail.

Once a state of emergency is declared - as it has been for the out-of-control fires - vendors cannot increase their prices by more than 10 percent.

That applies to small businesses as well as to mega-companies whose automated tools use supply and demand to set the cost of everything from hotel stays to concert tickets.

"If those algorithms lead to prices higher afer the declaration of emergency than before, by more than 10 percent, you're violating the law," Bonta said.

"You need to figure out how to adjust your prices consistent with the law. And if that means departing from your algorithm, depart from your algorithm."

The protections had been due to expire afer 30 to 180 days - but on Sunday, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed an executive order extending them until 7 Jaunary, 2026.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 8: California Governor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass tour the downtown business district of Pacific Palisades as the Palisades Fire continues to burn on January 8, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. Fueled by intense Santa Ana Winds, the Palisades Fire has grown to over 2,900 acres and 30,000 people have been ordered to evacuate while a second major fire continues to burn near Eaton Canyon in Altadena.   Eric Thayer/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by Eric Thayer / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

California Governor Gavin Newsom tours the business district of Pacific Palisades on January 8, 2025. Photo: ERIC THAYER / AFP

But for Brian, a retiree who has been sleeping in his car since the evacuation order was raised, the rules protecting against price gouging are almost beside the point.

The 69-year-old, who did not want to give his full name, had been living in a rent-controlled studio apartment in Pacific Palisades for two decades.

That has now gone, and along with it the guarantee that his rent cannot rise.

His pension, he fears, will not stretch far in a city where rents have doubled in the last 10 years - a problem likely to be exacerbated by the sudden rush of people needing somewhere new to live.

"I'm back on the market with tens of thousands of people," he said. "That doesn't bode well."

-AFP

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