Penticton Herald

Fire threatens homes as blazes burn across Western U.S.

- By EUGENE GARCIA and CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER

QUINCY, Calif. — Thousands of homes in Northern California remain threatened by the nation’s largest wildfire as unstable weather creates a high danger of new blazes erupting across the West.

Weekend thundersto­rms across the northern Sierra didn’t produce much rain, instead whipping up winds and unleashing lightning strikes that that bedeviled the more than 6,000 firefighte­rs trying to contain the month-old Dixie Fire amid temperatur­es forecast to top 38 Celsius.

“We’re definitely still dealing with the possibilit­y of lightning. Winds are all over the place. Things are going to be pretty unstable for the next couple days,” said fire spokesman Edwin Zuniga.

Gusts of up to 80 km/h on Saturday pushed flames closer to Janesville, a town of about 1,500 people just east of Greenville, the small gold rush-era community decimated by the fire 10 days ago.

James Reichle evacuated from Greenville and has been sleeping with his dog in a trailer outside a church. His home survived the flames but he’s been unable to return because the roads are closed. He said he feels for his neighbors at the evacuation center who lost everything.

“These are all people who either don’t have a home or don’t have access to a home. I still have a house standing, no damage. But I can’t get into it,” he said Saturday.

The Dixie Fire was the largest among more than 100 big blazes burning in more than a dozen states in the West, a region

seared by drought and hot, bone-dry weather that turned forests into tinder.

The U.S. Forest Service said it is operating in crisis mode, fully deploying firefighte­rs and maxing out its support system.

The roughly 21,000 federal firefighte­rs working on the ground is more than double the number of firefighte­rs sent to contain forest fires at this time a year ago, said Anthony Scardina, a deputy forester for the agency’s Pacific Southwest region.

The Dixie Fire has ravaged nearly 2,246 square kilometers — an area the size of Tokyo, or more than twice the size of Indianapol­is. It was 31% contained Sunday.

More than 1,000 homes and businesses have been destroyed and nearly 15,000 structures were still under threat from the Dixie fire, whose cause has not been determined. Pacific Gas and Electric has said it may have been sparked when a tree fell on its power line.

A few hundred miles to the south, evacuation­s were ordered Sunday after a blaze that broke out the night before churned through California forestland near the remote community of Omo Ranch. There was no containmen­t of the Caldor Fire burning in El Dorado County, about 73 km east of Sacramento.

Meanwhile, a small wildfire that blew up Saturday east of Salt Lake City, temporaril­y shutting down an interstate and leading to evacuation orders for some 8,000 residences, was caused by a vehicle with a malfunctio­ning catalytic converter, Utah Fire Info said. The Parleys Canyon Fire then calmed significan­tly, and homes were no longer threatened, officials said Sunday.

In southeaste­rn Montana, firefighte­rs gained ground on a pair of blazes that chewed through vast rangelands and at one point threatened the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservatio­n. those fires were caused by heat from coal seams, the deposits of coal found in the ground in the area, said Peggy Miller, a spokeswoma­n for the fires.

Mandatory evacuation­s for the tribal headquarte­rs town of Lame Deer were lifted Sunday, but remained in place for those with medical conditions, and heavy smoke made air quality unhealthy across much of Montana, according to the state Department of Environmen­tal Quality.

Smoke also drove air pollution levels to unhealthy or very unhealthy levels in parts of Northern California, Oregon and Idaho.

Climate change has made the U.S. West warmer and drier in the past 30 years and will continue to make the weather more extreme and wildfires more destructiv­e, according to scientists.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? This satellite image provided by Maxar Technologi­es shows a shortwave infrared (SWIR) satellite imagery overview of the Lame Deer and Richard Spring wildfires (rust colours) in Montana on Friday. SWIR satellite imagery is able to penetrate smoke.
The Associated Press This satellite image provided by Maxar Technologi­es shows a shortwave infrared (SWIR) satellite imagery overview of the Lame Deer and Richard Spring wildfires (rust colours) in Montana on Friday. SWIR satellite imagery is able to penetrate smoke.

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