The Telegram (St. John's)

California fire victims return home

Crews are gaining ground

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With the winds dying down, fire crews gained ground as they battled wildfires that have devastated California wine country and other parts of the state over the past week, and thousands of people got the all-clear to return home.

While the danger from the deadliest, most destructiv­e cluster of blazes in California history was far from over, the smoky skies started to clear in some places. People were being allowed to go back to homes in areas no longer in harm’s way, and the number of those under evacuation orders was down to 75,000 from nearly 100,000 the day before.

Many began to take the first steps toward rebuilding their lives.

“This is my home I’m going to come back without question,” said Howard Lasker, 56, who returned Sunday with his daughter to view their torched house in Santa Rosa. “I have to rebuild. I want to rebuild.”

Although the weather was still hot and dry Monday, calmer winds and the possibilit­y of rain later in the week should help crews tamp down fires, said Scott Rowe, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service. He predicted a quarter-inch (0.6 centimetre­s) would fall in Sonoma and Napa counties late Thursday.

“Any sort of moisture is welcome at this point,” he said. “In terms of fire, the weather outlook is looking to be improving.”

The blazes were blamed for at least 40 deaths and destroyed some 5,700 homes and other structures. The death toll could climb as searchers dig through the ruins for people listed as missing. Hundreds were unaccounte­d for, though authoritie­s said many of them are probably safe but haven’t let anyone know.

In hard-hit Sonoma County, Sheriff Rob Giordano said authoritie­s have located 1,560 of the more than 1,700 once listed as missing. Many of those names were put on the list after people called from out of state to say they couldn’t reach a friend or relative.

Authoritie­s said they will not let people return home until it is safe and utilities are restored. Pacific Gas and Electric Company said it expects to restore power and gas to the area by late Monday.

Many evacuees grew increasing­ly impatient to go home — or at least find out whether their homes were spared. Others were reluctant to go back or to look for another place to live.

Juan Hernandez, who escaped with his family from his apartment Oct. 9 before it burned down, still had his car packed and ready to go in case the fires flared up again and threatened his sister’s house, where they have been staying in Santa Rosa.

“Every day we keep hearing sirens at night, alarms,” Hernandez said. “We’re scared. When you see the fire close to your house, you’re scared.”

At the Sonoma fairground­s, evacuees watched the San Francisco 49ers play the Redskins on television, received treatment from a chiropract­or and got free haircuts.

Michael Estrada, who owns a barber shop in neighbouri­ng Marin County but grew up in one of the Santa Rosa neighbourh­oods hit hard by the blazes, brought his combs, clippers and scissors and displayed his barbering license in case anyone doubted his credential­s.

“I’m not saving lives,” he said. “I’m just here to make somebody’s day feel better, make them feel normal.”

Lois Krier, 86, said it was hard to sleep on a cot in the shelter with people snoring and dogs barking through the night.

She and her husband, William Krier, 89, were anxious to get home, but after being evacuated for a second time in a week Saturday, they didn’t want to risk having to leave again.

“We’re cautious,” she said. “We want to be safe.”

Nearly 11,000 firefighte­rs were still battling 15 fires burning across a 100-mile swath of the state.

In the wooded mountains east of Santa Rosa, where a mandatory evacuation remained in place, a large plume of white smoke rose high in the sky as firefighte­rs tried to prevent the fire from burning into a retirement community and advancing onto the floor of Sonoma Valley, known for its wineries.

Houses that had benefited from repeated helicopter water drops were still standing as smoke blew across surroundin­g ridges. A deer crossed the highway from a burned-out area and wandered into a vineyard not reached by the flames.

Those who were allowed back into gutted neighbourh­oods returned to assess the damage and, perhaps, see if anything was salvageabl­e.

Jack Daniels had recently completed a year-long remodel of his Napa house near the Silverado Country Club and watched it go up in flames last week as he, his wife, sevenyear-old grandson and two pugs backed out of the driveway.

His neighbours, Charles Rippey, 100, and his wife, Sara, 98, were the oldest victims identified so far in the wildfires.

Daniels, 74, a wine importer and exporter, said he lost everything left behind, including his wife’s jewelry and 3,000 bottles of wine in his cellar.

“It’s heartbreak­ing,” the 74-year-old said. “This was going to be our last house. I guess we’ve got one more move. But we’re fortunate. We got away. Most things can be replaced. The bank didn’t burn down.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A scorched truck and wheelchair sit outside the charred remains of a house in the Coffey Park area of Santa Rosa, Calif., Monday.
AP PHOTO A scorched truck and wheelchair sit outside the charred remains of a house in the Coffey Park area of Santa Rosa, Calif., Monday.

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