California makes headway against wildfires after fierce Santa Ana winds
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[November 01, 2019]
By Rollo Ross
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Fierce, dry Santa
Ana winds off the Southern California mountains eased early Friday,
helping firefighters make progress in corralling major wildfires that
have displaced thousands of residents.
A flurry of 25 mph wind gusts late Thursday triggered multiple smaller
blazes that kept firefighters busy, with more homes torched and
residents evacuated. But rescuers were grateful for the reduction in
wind speeds from 80 mph that had fanned and spread the flames earlier in
the week.
"We're seeing a marked reduction in the wind speeds," senior National
Weather Service meteorologist Patrick Burke at the Weather Prediction
Center in College Park, Maryland.
"We'll see steady winds of 15-20 mph through Friday, so that still
doesn't help, but it's way down from what it was. We'll continue to see
a marked reduction through the weekend. I'd say this wind event is about
over."
A fresh spate of wildfires roared to life on Thursday, destroying homes
and forcing evacuations, before the Santa Ana winds lost their punch
overnight.
But a fresh brush fire broke out atop South Mountain late Thursday in
Ventura County, consuming more than more than 4,000 acres and destroying
some buildings, and local media reported it had more than doubled in
size by early Friday.
Among several new wind-driven fires erupted Thursday on the rugged
slopes of the San Bernardino National Forest above the city of San
Bernardino, barreling downhill into the north end of town.
The so-called Hillside fire quickly devoured more than 200 acres (80
hectares) of dry scrub and destroyed or damaged at least six homes
before firefighters managed to keep the flames from advancing farther,
fire officials said.
As of early afternoon, crews had managed to carve containment lines
around 50% of the fire's perimeter. No injuries were reported, but
evacuation orders remained in effect for nearly 500 homes, displacing
about 1,300 residents.
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Firefighters direct water on a burning house during wildfires in San
Bernardino, California, U.S. October 31, 2019 in this screen grab
obtained from a social media video. 564FIRE via REUTERS
"TRAUMATIZING"
A fire that erupted early on Monday near the famed Getty Center art
museum in west Los Angeles threatened thousands of homes in some of
the city's wealthiest neighborhoods, but was largely suppressed by
Thursday, with containment listed at 40%.
Residents were allowed to return to most of the 10,000 homes that
had been ordered evacuated. The museum emerged unscathed, but about
a dozen dwellings were lost in the 745-acre Getty fire and two
firefighters were injured.
About 30 miles (48 km) to the northwest, a fire raged to the edge of
the hilltop Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Ventura County's
Simi Valley on Wednesday, threatening thousands of homes, but was 60
percent contained early on Friday.
Pacific Gas and Electric Co <PCG.N> acknowledged last week that the
Kincade fire, a blaze that charred 77,000 acres of Sonoma County
wine country north of San Francisco, started last week near a
damaged PG&E transmission tower at about the time a high-voltage
line on that tower malfunctioned.
That blaze has burned more than 77,700 acres and destroyed at least
349 homes and other structures, but was listed as 65% contained on
Thursday evening.
PG&E, which over this past weekend began shutting off power to
940,000 California customers to guard against the risk of an
electrical mishap sparking a blaze, said late on Thursday it had
restored electricity to virtually all customers.
(Additional reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Culver City and
Jonathan Allen in New York with additional reporting by Alex
Dobuzinskis in Culver City and Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by
Mark Heinrich)
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