You first must realize that before the utilities DID NOT "maintain proper tree & brush clearance", they once did so. . . until they were sued back in the 60s and 70s by the armchair conservatives in San Francisco and the other Bay Area cities in the Sierra Club for the unsightly denuding of the areas below their power lines for miles on end (which had the added benefit of creating firebreaks) which, according to the suits, were endangering nature and the wildlife. After multiple losses before liberal Federal judges, PG&E gave up and cut their clear cutting under power line program. The suits were too expensive and the courts ordered them to quit, despite the testimony of fire officials. That testimony was trumped by testimony from academics talking theoretically about the disruption of animal migration paths, and bird nesting, etc. . . with no evidentiary proof.
On drug condemnation. . . the law allows just such seizures now. Rental property used for drug sales, drug houses, etc, can be boarded up for one year depriving the owner of that income for that time. However, that ignores the fact that often the owner may be powerless to evict a drug-selling tenant, yet the law will board up his property regardless of the efforts he may have made to remove the druggy from his property, thus punishing the innocent property owner with no damage to the criminal.
There is also the issue of police corruption. Such property seizures make it too easy to grab innocent persons property on drummed up drug charges. There was an infamous case in San Diego County a couple decades ago where some cops did a no-knock drug raid on a wealthy ranchers house, shot and killed the owner, and seized the property as proceeds of drugs. . . but it turned out the cops had planted the drugs found during the raid.
I understand the history of stupidity when it comes to maintaining firebreaks in California, and the devastation that comes when you don’t.
My comments about bringing up the drug house laws isn’t quite communicated right; it is the people suing the cities/counties/etc for failure to stop such activities on the streets and seizing the value of such public property in a court judgment for that failure. Use the bad law against the cities/counties/etc that passed them, for illegally giving the public properties to private parties for illegal purposes.