No PriorsNo Priors Ep. 99 | With Rick Caruso
Elad Gil and Rick Caruso on rick Caruso Blasts LA Leadership, Outlines Faster, Smarter Wildfire Rebuild.
In this episode of No Priors, featuring Elad Gil and Rick Caruso, No Priors Ep. 99 | With Rick Caruso explores rick Caruso Blasts LA Leadership, Outlines Faster, Smarter Wildfire Rebuild Rick Caruso discusses the recent catastrophic Los Angeles wildfires, arguing they were worsened by decades of poor brush management, underfunded firefighting infrastructure, and empty reservoirs rather than being a pure act of nature. He contrasts his private preparedness playbook—non-combustible design, rapid-response protocols, private firefighting resources—with what he calls government negligence and budget misallocation. Caruso links the fires to broader structural issues in LA and California, including rising crime, weak law enforcement, homelessness spending with little impact, and decaying infrastructure. He advocates treating the rebuild like a business project: parallelizing cleanup, infrastructure upgrades, and permitting so residents can begin rebuilding within a year while modernizing systems for the 21st century.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Rick Caruso Blasts LA Leadership, Outlines Faster, Smarter Wildfire Rebuild
- Rick Caruso discusses the recent catastrophic Los Angeles wildfires, arguing they were worsened by decades of poor brush management, underfunded firefighting infrastructure, and empty reservoirs rather than being a pure act of nature. He contrasts his private preparedness playbook—non-combustible design, rapid-response protocols, private firefighting resources—with what he calls government negligence and budget misallocation. Caruso links the fires to broader structural issues in LA and California, including rising crime, weak law enforcement, homelessness spending with little impact, and decaying infrastructure. He advocates treating the rebuild like a business project: parallelizing cleanup, infrastructure upgrades, and permitting so residents can begin rebuilding within a year while modernizing systems for the 21st century.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
7 ideasWildfire damage was magnified by preventable policy and infrastructure failures.
Caruso argues the Palisades fire was fueled by 40 years of unmanaged brush, empty reservoirs in a gravity-fed system, and an underfunded fire department, turning a severe event into a historic catastrophe.
Proactive, resilient design can materially change outcomes in disasters.
Palisades Village survived because it used non-combustible materials, had backup water systems, private firefighting teams, and pre-defined rapid-response protocols—demonstrating how design and preparation can save structures and jobs.
Treat rebuilding like a business project with parallel workstreams.
Instead of a slow, linear government process, Caruso recommends dividing the region into quadrants, using multiple contractors, and running cleanup, design, and infrastructure upgrades in parallel under incentive-based timelines to enable rebuilding within a year.
Use the disaster to modernize infrastructure, not just restore the old.
He advocates using the rebuild to underground power lines, upgrade water and hydrant systems, implement recycled water use, and integrate advanced technologies, rather than recreating the same vulnerable systems.
Public safety requires both proactive policing and real accountability.
Caruso ties arson, looting, and overdose deaths to a wider pattern of non-enforcement, loss of officers, and lenient prosecution, arguing for empowered proactive policing, tougher stances on serial offenders and gangs, and better paths away from crime for those who want second chances.
Homelessness and drug crises show money alone doesn’t fix systemic issues.
Despite billions spent on homelessness, LA’s street population continues to grow, and areas like MacArthur Park see extreme overdose calls—evidence, in his view, of misdirected spending and lack of focus on outcomes.
California needs longer-term financial discipline and infrastructure focus.
Reflecting on the vanished $100B budget surplus, Caruso endorses ideas like a sovereign wealth fund (Norway-style) and urges redirecting state resources toward core infrastructure, education, power, and water systems that enable safety and prosperity.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesTo be in the second-largest city in the United States and to run out of water and have fire hydrants empty is completely insane.
— Rick Caruso
Maybe you couldn’t have prevented the fire. I’m completely convinced you could have substantially mitigated the fire.
— Rick Caruso
If we approach this thinking like a government, it’s gonna take years. If we approach this thinking like a businessperson, you could have people building again in a year.
— Rick Caruso
Why would you build the same system when you know you’re in a fire hazard area? It doesn’t make any sense.
— Rick Caruso
This isn’t about politics. The problems we have now are so much bigger than politics.
— Rick Caruso
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsWhat specific policy changes or accountability mechanisms would prevent a repeat of the reservoir and brush-management failures Caruso describes?
Rick Caruso discusses the recent catastrophic Los Angeles wildfires, arguing they were worsened by decades of poor brush management, underfunded firefighting infrastructure, and empty reservoirs rather than being a pure act of nature. He contrasts his private preparedness playbook—non-combustible design, rapid-response protocols, private firefighting resources—with what he calls government negligence and budget misallocation. Caruso links the fires to broader structural issues in LA and California, including rising crime, weak law enforcement, homelessness spending with little impact, and decaying infrastructure. He advocates treating the rebuild like a business project: parallelizing cleanup, infrastructure upgrades, and permitting so residents can begin rebuilding within a year while modernizing systems for the 21st century.
How scalable are Caruso’s private-sector fire-preparedness practices, and what would it take to mandate similar resilience standards for all high-risk communities?
Where exactly has LA’s homelessness spending gone, and what outcome-based metrics should be used to judge those programs?
How can cities balance necessary proactive policing with protections against abuse and overreach in high-crime, high-tension environments?
What would a California sovereign wealth fund concretely look like, and how could it be structured to safeguard infrastructure investment from short-term political cycles?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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