Northern California wildfires kill three, force evacuation of thousands
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[September 29, 2020]
By Adrees Latif and Stephen Lam
SANTA ROSA, Calif. (Reuters) - A northern
California wildfire raging in the foothills of the Cascade range has
claimed three lives, officials said on Monday, as a separate blaze
prompted mass evacuations and spread turmoil to the famed wine-producing
regions of Napa and Sonoma counties.
The three fatalities in the so-called Zogg Fire in Shasta County, which
erupted on Sunday near Redding, about 200 miles north of San Francisco,
were reported by the county sheriff and the California Department of
Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire). They were all civilians.
No further details about the victims or how they perished were
immediately provided. But the deaths bring to 29 the number of people
killed since mid-August in a California wildfire season of historic
proportions.
The Zogg fire, which has destroyed 146 structures and charred 31,000
acres of grassy hillsides and oak woodlands thick with dry scrub,
coincided with the outbreak of another conflagration in the heart of
California's wine country north of the Bay area.
That blaze, dubbed the Glass Fire, has spread across 36,000 acres of
similar terrain in Napa and Sonoma counties since early Sunday,
incinerating more than 100 homes and other buildings, forcing thousands
of residents to flee and threatening world-renowned vineyards, according
to CalFire.
Both fires were listed at zero containment as of Monday evening. The
cause of each was under investigation.
They marked the latest flashpoints in a destructive spate of wildfires
this summer across the Western United States.
In California this year, wildfires have scorched 3.7 million acres (1.5
million hectares) since January - far exceeding any single year in state
history. They have been stoked by intense, prolonged bouts of heat, high
winds and other weather extremes that scientists attribute to climate
change.
More than 7,000 homes and other structures have burned statewide so far
this year.
LANDMARK CHATEAU BURNS
The Glass Fire broke out in Napa Valley before dawn near Calistoga
before merging with two other blazes into a larger eruption of flames
straddling western Napa County and an adjacent swath of Sonoma County.
In one notable property loss, the mansion-like Chateau Boswell winery in
St. Helena - a familiar landmark along the Silverado Trail road running
the length of the Napa Valley - went up in flames on Sunday night.
An estimated 60,000 residents have been placed under evacuation orders
or advisories in Sonoma and Napa counties combined, but no injuries have
been reported.
Not everyone heeded evacuation orders.
As neighbors around him fled, Santa Rosa resident Jas Sihota perched
himself on his front porch with a garden hose, darting out every 15
minutes or so to douse nearby spot fires seeded by wind-blown embers
under a hazy red sun.
Sihota, a radiology technician at a nearby hospital, said he had not
slept in some 24 hours.
"I wouldn't have a house if I didn't stay," said Sihota. At least 10
homes elsewhere on the street beyond the reach of his hose were
destroyed.
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The Glass Fire burns along a hillside in Calistoga, California, U.S.
September 28, 2020. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
In 2017, roughly 5% of Santa Rosa's homes were lost when downed
power lines sparked a devastating firestorm in October that swept
the region, killing 19 people.
HARVEST SEASON SMOKE
The Glass Fire struck about midway through the region's traditional
grape-harvesting season, already disrupted by a spate of large fires
earlier this summer.
Several Napa Valley growers said recently they would forgo a 2020
vintage altogether due to smoke contamination of ripening grapes
waiting to be picked.
The 475 vintners in Napa Valley alone account for just 4% of the
state's grape harvest but half the retail value of all California
wines sold. Sonoma County, too, has become a premiere viticulture
region with some 450 wineries and a million acres of vineyards.
The full impact on the region's wine business remains to be seen and
will differ for each grower, depending on how far along they are in
the harvest, said Teresa Wall, spokeswoman for the Napa Valley
Vintners trade group.
"There are some who were close to wrapping up, and some who were
still planning to leave their grapes hanging out there for a while,"
she said.
The fires caused major upheavals for the area's most vulnerable
residents already grappling with the coronavirus pandemic.
The Adventist Health St. Helena hospital was forced to evacuate
patients on Sunday, the second time in a month following a
lightning-sparked wildfire in August.
On Monday, residents at Oakmont Gardens, a Santa Rosa retirement
community, leaned on walkers and waited to board a bus taking them
to safety, their face masks doubling as protection against smoke and
COVID-19.
Over 100,000 homes and business have suffered power outages across
northern California since Sunday, some from precautionary shutoffs
of transmission lines to reduce wildfire risks in the midst of
extremely windy, hot, dry weather, Pacific Gas and Electric Co
reported.
Red-flag warnings for extreme wildfire risks remained posted for
much of Northern California, forecasting low humidity and gale-force
wind gusts.
(Reporting by Adrees Latif and Stephen Lam in Santa Rosa,
California; Writing and additional reporting by Jonathan Allen in
New York and Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Peter Cooney,
Gerry Doyle & Shri Navaratnam)
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