Crews make headway against massive California wildfire
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[September 24, 2020]
By Mimi Dwyer
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Firefighters
notched a victory in their battle to beat back a massive blaze raging
outside Los Angeles, more than doubling containment in the past 24
hours, the U.S. Forest Service said on Wednesday.
The Bobcat Fire, which has been burning in the San Gabriel Mountains
north of Los Angeles since Sept. 6, was 38% contained as of Wednesday
morning, John Clearwater, USFS spokesperson for Angeles National Forest,
said in an email update.
The fire has so far burned more than 113,000 acres but remained
relatively stable overnight. The flames were 17% contained on Tuesday.
The Bobcat Fire, one of the largest and most dangerous fires in recorded
Los Angeles history, is just one element stoking the worst fire season
California has seen to date.
For more than a week it has threatened to overtake the Mount Wilson
Observatory, a California landmark and beloved historical site that was
home to major astronomical advancements in the early 20th century.
Some 1,556 firefighters are currently deployed to combat it, the Forest
Service said.
Wildfires have ravaged the West Coast this summer and pushed
firefighters to their limits. At least 26 people have died in fires
across California since August 15, including three firefighters,
according to the state agency CAL FIRE.
One of those firefighters died as a result of a fire sparked by a
botched gender reveal party.
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Firefighters work at the site of the Bobcat Fire burning near Mount
Wilson in the Angeles National Forest, near Los Angeles, U.S.,
September 23, 2020. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
Roughly 3.4 million acres have burned across California during the
same period.
Another 10 people have died and approximately 2 million acres have
burned in fires in Washington and Oregon.
California has seen five of its largest fires on record in this
wildfire season alone. Outside Los Angeles, the momentary reprieve
could dissipate by the weekend, when weather was expected to grow
warmer and drier, and forecasts showed the possibility of gusty
winds, the Forest Service said.
(Reporting by Mimi Dwyer; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and David
Gregorio)
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