Firefighters gaining edge in California
wildfires that have killed at least 40
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[October 16, 2017]
By Salvador Rodriguez
SANTA ROSA (Reuters) - Firefighters began
gaining ground on wildfires that killed at least 40 people in the past
week, the deadliest blazes in California's history, as winds eased and
searchers combed charred ruins for more victims with hundreds still
missing.
Two of the three most destructive Northern California fires were more
than half contained early on Monday, and some residents who fled the
flames in hard-hit Sonoma County could be allowed to return home later
in the day, officials said.
More than 5,700 structures were destroyed by more than a dozen wildfires
that ignited a week ago and consumed an area larger than New York City.
Entire neighborhoods in the city of Santa Rosa were reduced to ashes.
"Overall, things are feeling optimistic. We're very cautious about
that," said Brad Gouvea, California Department of Forestry and Fire
Protection incident commander. "You'd never know it's the middle of
October in Sonoma County and have fire behavior like this."
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Warm and very dry weather is forecast to continue through Monday, the
National Weather Service said. Rain could arrive on Thursday after a
cooling trend, it said.
Steve Crawford, a Cal Fire operations chief, said heavy winds had
lightened and helped drive flames away from populated areas. Better
weather and additional equipment and manpower made available as other
fires died down had also helped.
"Before we were kind of chasing the fire," he said.
In another hopeful sign, Mendocino County authorities said power company
PG&E would begin flying low in the county to check lines and
re-establish power.
About 11,000 firefighters supported by air tankers and helicopters are
battling blazes that have consumed more than 217,000 acres (88,000
hectares).
About 50 search-and-rescue personnel backed by National Guard troops
were combing tens of thousands of charred acres in Sonoma County for
bodies, sheriff's spokeswoman Misti Harris said.
"Once it's safe to go through, we'll search every structure," she said.
Twenty-two people were killed in Sonoma County and 174 were still listed
as missing there, although the number has dropped from 235 on Saturday
as more people checked in with authorities.
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Evacuation orders were lifted for the picturesque Napa Valley resort
town of Calistoga, whose 5,000 residents were ordered out by authorities
four days ago with fire just miles from downtown.
RETURNING TO THE UNKNOWN
Some evacuees being housed at a Sonoma raceway hoped to return home.
Retiree Stephen Garner, 68, of Sonoma, has been camped with his wife in
the couple's recreational vehicle.
"As far as we know our house is OK, but that's the hard part, you don't
know,” he said.
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An air tanker drops retardant to contain a wildfire outside Santa
Rosa, California, U.S., October 15, 2017. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart
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In Redwood Valley, a scorched Mendocino County town of about 1,700
people, Jami Flores and her family sifted through the ruins of their
two-story rental home, which was reduced to rubble.
"There's been a lot of crying and a lot of emotions," Flores, 42,
said.
Flores, her husband and daughter fled Monday morning after being
awoken by the smell of smoke, not uncommon in the area. Seeing a red
haze, they rushed to leave amid falling ash and arriving
firefighters.
"The mountain was on fire," Flores said. Now she wonders, "Where do
we all go next?"
The fast-moving fires north of San Francisco remained a danger, with
thousands ordered to leave their homes at the weekend.
Firefighters gained control of two of the deadliest fires in wine
country's Napa and Sonoma counties: The Tubbs fire was 60 percent
contained and the Atlas fire 65 percent contained, Cal Fire said.
Nearly half of the Redwood Valley fire, which alone is responsible
for eight deaths in Mendocino County, was extinguished by late
Sunday.
The 40 confirmed fatalities make the fires California's deadliest
since record-keeping began, surpassing the 29 deaths from the
Griffith Park fire of 1933 in Los Angeles.
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About 75,000 people remain displaced.
At least a dozen Napa Valley and Sonoma County wineries were damaged
or destroyed, throwing the state's wine industry and related tourism
into disarray.
Firefighters from Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Colorado, Nevada,
Utah and New York are helping battle the blazes. Cal Fire estimated
the fires would be contained by Friday.
The year's wildfire season is one of the worst in U.S. history, with
nearly 8.6 million acres (3.4 million hectares) burned by Oct. 13,
according to the National Interagency Fire Center. The worst on
record for the same period in a year was 9.3 million acres in 2015.
(Editing by Chris Michaud and Paul Tait)
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