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		Parts of ravaged Paradise open for first 
		time since California wildfire 
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		 [December 06, 2018] 
		By Saif Tawfeeq 
 PARADISE, Calif. (Reuters) - Thousands of 
		Paradise residents who fled a monster blaze a month ago were allowed on 
		Wednesday to return to some neighborhoods in the Northern California 
		city nearly obliterated by one of the deadliest wildfires in U.S. 
		history.
 
 Tim Moniz, a rice farmer and welder in his 50s, personally surveyed the 
		remains of his Paradise property for the first time since the fire, 
		confirming his suspicions that his house was gone. He and his wife only 
		recently paid off the mortgage.
 
 "It seems unfair that some houses make it and yours don't," Moniz said. 
		"I just had to get back up and see it and try to salvage something."
 
 Paradise residents who return to their ravaged homes will face a 
		daunting task to resume normal life, with some likely to encounter 
		months or even years of work to obtain compensation for their losses and 
		rebuild.
 
 Authorities hurriedly evacuated some 50,000 people in Paradise and 
		neighboring towns when the Camp Fire erupted on Nov. 8. The fire killed 
		at least 85 people with nearly a dozen still unaccounted for. It also 
		destroyed nearly 14,000 homes in the wooded, foothill communities.
 
		
		 
		
 Evacuation orders were previously lifted in areas outside Paradise, but 
		Wednesday marked the first day officials opened parts of the city itself 
		in the midst of the fire's scorched wasteland of 153,000 acres (61,900 
		hectares).
 
 REBUILDING A RESHAPED TOWN
 
 Moniz said he is among those planning to rebuild, rather than move away.
 
 But the fire's devastation will reshape the town and - at least 
		initially - lower its population, Paradise Mayor Jody Jones said by 
		telephone.
 
 "All my friends who are in their 80s, they're just not going to go 
		through this process of rebuilding," Jones said, adding she believes 
		three-quarters of Paradise residents will rebuild.
 
		Some residents may be able to salvage jewelry or even stuff such as 
		intact tool boxes from the rubble of their houses, said Jones, who lost 
		her own home in the fire.
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			Deer are seen on a property damaged by the Camp Fire in Paradise, 
			California, U.S. November 21, 2018. REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage/File 
			Photo 
            
			 
            Some residents rumbled back into town in recreational vehicles, 
			apparently planning to spend the night, Paradise Police Chief Eric 
			Reinbold said by phone.
 Authorities said they will let some residents stay overnight on 
			their properties, but advise against it because electricity, gas and 
			other services were not available.
 
 Paradise's skyline is dotted with 30 large cranes that crews are 
			using to remove debris, said city spokesman Matt Gates.
 
 Health and safety specialists are sweeping through Paradise to 
			remove batteries, propane tanks, household chemicals and other 
			environmental hazards in the aftermath of the fire, Gates said. 
			Residents entering the re-opened areas of town were offered gear to 
			protect themselves from hazardous materials, Reinbold said.
 
 Full removal of debris could take nine months, Jones said.
 
 (Reporting by Saif Tawfeeq; Additional reporting and writing by Alex 
			Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; editing by Bill Tarrant and Lisa 
			Shumaker)
 
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