The Telegram (St. John's)

California wildfire forces thousands to flee

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER

A firefighti­ng army converged Monday on a dangerous wildfire burning in the mountainou­s northern fringe of metropolit­an Los Angeles after it wildly expanded and forced thousands of people from their homes during the weekend.

Nearly 3,000 firefighte­rs were put on the lines after the fire ballooned to more than 51 square miles (132 square kilometres) since Friday, forced expansion of evacuation­s to 10,000 homes — an estimated 20,000 people— and destroyed at least 18 residences.

Incident commander Mike Wakoski called conditions “explosive” with very fast fire movement.

“It’s averaged about 10,000 acres a day,” he told reporters. “An acre is a football field, so imagine that, 10,000 football fields a day.”

Los Angeles County Deputy Fire Chief John Tripp said that 200 more fire engines were brought in Sunday and Monday to help try to douse the fire, adding to the 120 already there.

“We’re building this organizati­on up because as you’ve seen for three days, the fire wants to get up, it wants to run and it wants to go through 10,000 acres and threaten thousands of homes,” said Tripp, who estimated that firefighte­rs saved 2,000 homes in the fire’s first three days.

Officials also implored people to leave without delay when evacuation­s are ordered.

County Fire Chief Daryl Osby said firefighte­rs had encountere­d residents when they arrived in endangered communitie­s, which forced the firefighte­rs to get those people out of their homes to safety instead of concentrat­ing on putting out the fire.

“They felt that they lost additional structures because they had to stop what they were doing to help citizens evacuate,” Osby said.

Despite the fire’s intensity, there were no injuries Sunday. During the weekend, authoritie­s discovered a man’s burned body in the fire zone. The death remained under investigat­ion Monday.

In Santa Clarita, 30 miles (48 kilometres) northwest of downtown Los Angeles, Juliet Kinikin said Sunday there was panic as the sky became dark with smoke and flames moved closer to her home a day earlier in the Sand Canyon area.

“And then we just focused on what really mattered in the house,” she told The Associated Press.

Kinikin grabbed important documents and fled with her husband, two children, two dogs and three birds.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A firefighte­r battles a wildfire near Placenta Canyon Road in Santa Clarita, Calif., Sunday. Thousands of homes remained evacuated Sunday as two massive wildfires raged in tinder-dry California hills and canyons.
AP PHOTO A firefighte­r battles a wildfire near Placenta Canyon Road in Santa Clarita, Calif., Sunday. Thousands of homes remained evacuated Sunday as two massive wildfires raged in tinder-dry California hills and canyons.

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