http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/24/america/24calif.php

 


California fires out of control as more than 500,000 flee 
By Jennifer Steinhauer

Wednesday, October 24, 2007 
LOS ANGELES: Punishing winds and unstable thermal conditions - married with 
strained firefighting resources - stymied efforts Tuesday to contain a slew of 
wildfires burning for a third day across Southern California.

While firefighters late Tuesday began to get the upper hand on some fires in 
Los Angeles county, officials in San Diego were left worried that the fires 
could march toward more populated areas along the Pacific Ocean.

"As long as the east wind continues to blow, that is the direction things are 
going," said Roxanne Provaznik, spokeswoman for the California Department of 
Forestry and Fire Protection. "There are a lot of homes on that coastal 
community, so there is so much potential injury."

By Tuesday, more than 400 square miles in seven counties had been consumed by 
some 16 fires, flames fueled by high desert winds and hot temperatures that 
remained largely impervious to air attacks, garden hoses, fire retardant or 
prayers for relief.

The authorities said the blazes, raging from the Simi Valley northwest of Los 
Angeles to the Mexican border, were responsible for two deaths, and possibly 
five others. At least 25 firefighters and civilians were reported to have 
suffered burns.

By late Tuesday, the fires had consumed well over 1,000 homes and commercial 
structures, with the authorities reporting that 68,500 homes remained 
threatened. At least 500,000 people were estimated to have evacuated and 
thousands more had been ordered to move, making the evacuation effort roughly 
half the size of that from the New Orleans area after Hurricane Katrina. The 
authorities said firefighters were overwhelmed as new blazes sparked and 
existing ones thrashed in new directions, impeding efforts to focus energy and 
resources. By midday, a new fire began in San Diego County even as fires 
elsewhere became partially contained.

President George W. Bush, responding to entreaties from Governor Arnold 
Schwarzenegger, declared a state of emergency in California, paving the way for 
U.S. disaster aid to arrive, and said he would survey the state on Thursday.

While Schwarzenegger said during a news conference Tuesday that he was "happy" 
with the number of firefighters working the blazes, officials said that they 
were stretched thin and that a lack of resources was as much a burden as the 
temperatures and winds.

"Our resources are low," Provaznik said in a telephone interview from San 
Diego. "Our firefighters are stretched out because of the number of fires 
around the state."

Bush, mindful of the embarrassment his administration suffered after the Gulf 
Coast disaster two years ago, dispatched officials from the Department of 
Homeland Security to assess the damage. Federal and local fire teams from 
Nevada, Oregon and Wyoming joined the fight, and the governor called up 1,500 
National Guard members.

The governor expanded his request to Bush on Tuesday afternoon, asking him to 
raise his declaration to "major disaster," which would affect how the state is 
reimbursed later. The governor estimated that $75 million in federal aid would 
be needed.

Swift emergency response efforts, most likely matched by memories of the 
devastating fires here in 2003, may have contributed to the relatively low 
death toll.

"These are big fires, tragic, and the impact of these things will last a long 
time," said Jodi Traversaro, spokeswoman for the state's Office of Emergency 
Services. "I think Katrina taught us a whole lot."

Two fires in Los Angeles County were largely contained Tuesday night. "This is 
a good news story," Lee Baca, the Los Angeles County sheriff, said at a news 
conference. But the rest of the state was less lucky.

San Diego County remained the worst of the burning regions, with at least 1,250 
homes and 102 buildings destroyed and half a million people, according to local 
officials, displaced. The estimates of the number of people displaced, however, 
varied wildly between state and local officials.

A shift in the prevailing winds in the area on Tuesday, from the fierce but 
predictable Santa Ana winds, to more volatile western ones, also plagued 
firefighters.

But the director of San Diego County's Office of Emergency Services, Ron Lane, 
said at a news conference Tuesday evening that he thought the corner had been 
turned and that more favorable weather forecast would allow firefighters to 
make real headway. "The worst is behind us," Lane said.

In many areas, firefighters were no match for speeding flames and sought refuge 
in aluminum fire shelters or retreated in the face of burning hillsides. Strong 
winds made attacks from the air difficult.

"We tried to get back in there at about 5 a.m. but we couldn't get through," 
John Miller, a United States Forest Service spokesman, said, referring to two 
fires in the town of Lake Arrowhead, in the San Bernardino National Forest, 
where at least 100 homes and 5,000 acres have been destroyed. "It was a wall of 
fire."

California residents who were forced to leave home struggled to sift through 
the rumors. David Yurkovic, 43, was in a shelter in San Bernardino with his 
five children and his pregnant wife, Roberta. "She's due in two months; she 
doesn't feel so good," he said. "I don't know if my house is O.K. I have no 
idea. The worst part here is the rumors."

The speed and ferocity of the fires were fueled by a lethal combination of 
heat, drought and the often hurricanelike Santa Ana winds that travel from the 
Mojave Desert into the coastal mountains, which become hotter as they hit 
parched valleys.

Throughout Southern California, the sky was illuminated with a pink, hazy glow, 
and smoke rose like a marine layer of fog. Angry red embers jumped from yards 
to roads. Ash fell onto parked cars miles from fires.

The typically bustling Lake Arrowhead resembled a ghost town, with abandoned 
shops and homes. A choking haze of smoke and ash covered the mountain, creating 
dusk at noon. At 6,000 feet, the smoke blacked out the sun above and the valley 
below.

The closer to the center of the blazes, the louder the roaring crackle of fire. 
The air filled with smoke, gas and fine particles, making it extremely 
difficult to breathe comfortably in some areas. Air-quality experts implored 
residents to curtail outdoor activities.

Not everyone obeyed orders to leave. Greg Curfman, 42, and his daughter 
Brittney, 18, were among a group of Silverado Canyon residents who refused to 
leave their homes. By 3 p.m. on Tuesday, Curfman was exhausted from helping 
transfer the animals on his ranch to safe places around Orange County. "I'm 
staying here unless it's a last-ditch effort," said Curfman, who has lived in 
the canyon for 15 years.

In Castaic, California, a suburban enclave in northern Los Angeles County, a 
fast-moving fire surprised local residents who had thought the troubles were 
confined to areas to their south.

Roughly 60 Mexican firefighters from the border cities of Tijuana and Tecate 
crossed into the United States on Sunday to help fight the fires, but they 
scrambled home Monday when fires broke out south of the border.

A survey conducted by the California Farm Bureau Federation found that avocado 
and citrus groves, nurseries, vineyards, rangeland, and other farm and ranch 
operations were possibly damaged, with thousands of horses evacuated to 
shelters and livestock also possibly caught in the fires' path.

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