Jump to content

Wind-driven Los Angeles wildfire leaves one dead, forces 100,000 to flee


rooster59

Recommended Posts

Wind-driven Los Angeles wildfire leaves one dead, forces 100,000 to flee

By Steve Gorman

 

2019-10-11T223354Z_2_LYNXMPEF9A1YQ_RTROPTP_4_CALIFORNIA-FIRES.JPG

Firefighters battle a wind-driven wildfire called the Saddle Ridge fire in the early morning hours Friday in Porter Ranch, California, U.S., October 11, 2019. REUTERS/Gene Blevins

 

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A fierce, wind-driven wildfire swept through foothills and canyons along the northern edge of Los Angeles on Friday, engulfing homes, closing roads and devouring acre upon acre of dry brush and chaparral as 100,000 residents were forced to flee.

 

At least one death was attributed to the fire, a man who authorities said suffered a heart attack while trying to battle encroaching flames on his own property rather than heeding evacuation orders.

 

The blaze, dubbed the Saddleridge fire, ignited on Thursday night and by midday Friday had raced across some 7,500 acres, growing into the largest and most ferocious among a spate of wildfires across Southern California.

 

As water-dropping helicopters and airplane tankers loaded with flame retardant fought the blaze from the air, ground crews battled at close range with hand tools and bulldozers, while firefighters lugging hoses from house to house scrambled to protect threatened neighborhoods.

 

Their efforts were paying off. Although at least 25 homes were destroyed, fire officials said their crews managed to save thousands of dwellings while carving containment lines around 13 percent of the fire's perimeter.

 

U.S. Representative Brad Sherman told Reuters he was among residents who fled as flames approached.

 

"I left a bit earlier than most because I was watching the news, and the moment they posted on the internet that I was in the mandatory evacuation area, I was out," Sherman said by mobile phone as he walked back to check on his home in the Porter Ranch suburb.

 

The conflagration was stoked by strong, dry Santa Ana winds blowing into Los Angeles from desert areas to the east.

Those winds were moving flames at a rate of 800 acres per hour at the fire's height, city fire officials said at a morning news conference.

 

"This is a very dynamic fire," Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas told reporters, urging residents in harm's way to heed evacuation orders. "Do not wait to leave."

 

The cause of the blaze was under investigation.

 

'DON'T BE FOOLED'

 

Los Angeles County Fire Chief Deputy Dave Richardson cautioned that an apparent lull in fire activity on Friday afternoon should not create a false sense of security.

 

"Don't be fooled," he said. "There's a lot of potential for additional growth of this fire."

 

Some 23,000 homes and around 100,000 residents were under mandatory evacuation orders from the Saddleridge fire, and three emergency shelters quickly filled to capacity. Many evacuees were left to wonder whether their homes were still standing.

 

Porter Ranch was one of the communities under mandatory evacuation orders [L3N26W3ZR]. The upscale suburb lies adjacent to a natural gas storage field where a wellhead rupture caused a massive methane leak in 2015 that forced nearby residents from their homes on and off for months.

 

The blaze also was "threatening a number of" transmission lines owned by Southern California Edison, a utility spokeswoman, Susan Cox, said.

 

Several freeways were closed at the outset of the blaze.

 

Thick clouds of smoke billowing from the blaze drifted across a wide swath of northern Los Angeles, causing air quality problems that prompted the city school district to close dozens of public schools throughout the San Fernando Valley.

 

Los Angeles County Fire Captain Tony Imbrenda told local radio station KPCC that high winds had hampered the ability to fight the flames from the air, sometimes causing dissipation of water and fire-retardant drops before they could hit the ground.

 

Similarly strong winds in northern California prompted utility giant Pacific Gas & Electric to impose a precautionary shutoff of power to hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses to reduce the risk of wildfires over the past few days.

 

SANDALWOOD FIRE

 

Authorities also fought to gain an upper hand on the Sandalwood Fire in Riverside County, about 70 miles east of the Saddleridge fire, which had scorched about 830 acres and destroyed 76 homes and other structures by Friday around the town of Calimesa.

 

One fatality was reported, along with two people who were unaccounted for. The blaze was just 10% contained, Riverside County Fire Department (RCFD) officials said.

 

The Sandalwood fire erupted on Thursday afternoon when a garbage truck dumped burning trash that spread onto vegetation, the RCFD and California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) said in a statement.

 

Much of Northern California, from San Francisco to the Oregon border, remained under a statewide "red flag" fire alert for heightened fire danger on Friday.

 

By late Thursday, PG&E announced it had restored power to more than half of its customers whose power was turned off, and that 312,000 remained without electricity.

 

As winds moved south Friday, a power shutdown similar to PG&E's was underway at Southern California Edison, which cut electricity to more than 20,000 customers and warned that 110,000 more could face outages later.

 

(Reporting by Gabriella Borter, Rich McKay, Andrew Hay, Dan Whitcomb; Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis and Andrew Hay; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Bill Tarrant and Daniel Wallis)

 

reuters_logo.jpg

-- © Copyright Reuters 2019-10-12

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.




×
×
  • Create New...