In addition, as climate change affects more and more places, I think SF will be the winner. It maintains a naturally air conditioned 65 degrees all summer long during a decade that has seen even Portland Oregon go into the high triple digits.
Apparently not because these are the hottest days in sf history:
1. September 1, 2017 – 106 degrees
T-2. June 14, 2000 – 103 degrees
T-2. July 17, 1988 – 103 degrees
T-4. September 2, 2017 – 102 degrees
T-4. October 5, 1987 – 102 degrees
T-6. September 14, 1971 – 101 degrees
T-6. May 30, 2001 – 101 degrees
T-6. June 14, 1961 – 101 degrees
T-6. September 16, 1913 – 101 degrees
T-6. September 8, 1904 – 101 degrees
T-11. October 4, 1987 – 100 degrees
T-11. September 8, 1984 – 100 degrees
9 of the next 10 days in Dallas would be on that list. 3 days from last year in Seattle would be in the top 5 days on that list.
We are comparable to the extremes of a coastal eastern city, with significantly lower temperatures between the peaks. There’s not many places in the US that have never seen 106.
As for water, 80%+ of it in California is used for food that is exported elsewhere.
Strawberries in December in New York are much more at risk than humans in CA.
As for fires, nowhere in the world is safe from that, as this summer is proving.
Don't sleep on San Francisco.