Monster wildfire in California rages on
after killing two firefighters
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[July 28, 2018]
By Alexandria Sage
REDDING, Calif. (Reuters) - Nine people
were reportedly missing as a monster wildfire in northern California
burned unchecked on Saturday after it killed two firefighters, destroyed
hundreds of structures and sent thousands of frantic residents racing
from their homes.
Some 3,400 firefighters on the ground and in helicopters and airplanes
battled the 48,300-acre (19,500 hectares) Carr Fire early on Saturday as
it ripped through Redding, a city of 90,000 people, in California's
scenic Shasta-Trinity area.
More than 38,000 residents in Redding and elsewhere in Shasta County
fled their homes as the fire began to gain speed and intensity on
Thursday, destroying 500 structures and leaving Keswick, a town of 450,
in smoldering ruins, California Department of Forestry and Fire
Protection (CalFire) said.
The fire, which was just three percent contained after igniting six days
ago, has been fed by high temperatures and low humidity, which were
expected to continue for at least the next week, said CalFire Director
Ken Pimlott.
"This fire is a long way from done," he said.
A bulldozer operator and a member of the Redding Fire Department were
killed in the blaze. A Redding hospital said it had treated eight
people, including three firefighters.
Nine people, including a woman and her two great-great grandchildren,
were missing, a CBS news affiliate in Sacramento reported, citing local
police. The woman's husband Ed Bledsoe told the station that he left
them home to run an errand on Thursday night.
"He called and said 'grandpa you need to come, the fire is coming at our
house now,'" Bledsoe said of a phone call he had with his great-great
grandson while he was gone. "I can't see how I can go on without them."
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A blackened landscape is shown from wildfire damage near Keswick,
California, U.S., July 27, 2018. REUTERS/Alexandria Sage
The flames erupted into a firestorm on Thursday when it jumped
across the Sacramento River and swept into the western side of
Redding, about 150 miles (240 km) north of Sacramento, before
gale-force winds during the night created a fire "tornado," fire
officials said.
Firefighters and police were hustling door to door to usher
civilians out of harm's way, they said.
California has had its worst start to the fire season in a decade,
with 289,727 acres burned through Friday morning, according to
National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) data.
Governor Jerry Brown requested emergency federal assistance to
prevent an "imminent catastrophe" as Shasta County tried to find
supplies and water for evacuated residents and care for horses and
cattle rescued from ranches and farms.
Wildfires have blackened an estimated 4.15 million acres (1.68
million hectares) in the United States so far this year. That was
well above average for the same period over the past 10 years but
down from 5.27 million acres (2.13 million hectares) in the first
seven months of 2017, NIFC reported.
(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee, Editing by
William Maclean and Clelia Oziel)
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