Vancouver Sun

Thousands told to leave as fire spreads

Museum, LeBron James’ home threatened

- LISA RICHWINE

LOS ANGELES • Wind-whipped flames chased thousands of residents from wealthy Los Angeles neighbourh­oods and threatened the city’s famed Getty Center museum on Monday, the latest outbreak in a wildfire season that has triggered mass evacuation­s and power outages across California.

Los Angeles Lakers great LeBron James, Terminator star and former California Governor Arnold Schwarzene­gger, actor Clark Gregg and Sons of Anarchy creator Kurt Sutter all said on Twitter they had been forced to flee their homes.

James said he had heeded the warning and had been driving around before dawn with his family looking for shelter.

“Finally found a place to accommodat­e us!” he wrote a short time later on Twitter. “Crazy night man!”

The new conflagrat­ion broke out at around 1:30 a.m. local time near the Getty Center on the west side of Los Angeles, hundreds of kilometres from where crews were fighting the state’s biggest and most destructiv­e fire, the Kincade, north of San Francisco.

“I know this moment generates a tremendous amount of anxiety,” Gov. Gavin Newsom told reporters at a news conference, speaking of the two major blazes burning at opposite ends of the state.

The governor said he was confident that firefighte­rs had secured enough perimeters around the Kincade fire that it no longer posed an imminent threat to two communitie­s north of Santa Rosa, although he conceded the fight was not over.

“I’m not naive about shifting winds and shifting conditions so we are putting all the assets we have onto this fire,” said Newsom, who declared a statewide emergency last week.

As of midday the Kincade Fire, which erupted on Wednesday night, had blackened 66,000 acres across parts of Sonoma County’s picturesqu­e wine country, destroying 96 homes and other structures.

More than 4,100 firefighte­rs working the blaze had built containmen­t lines around only five per cent of the flames following a windfanned flare-up on Sunday.

I KNOW THIS MOMENT GENERATES A TREMENDOUS AMOUNT OF ANXIETY.

Across the state in Los Angeles, the Getty Fire had charred more than 202 hectares in the scrub-covered hills around Interstate 405, near some of the city’s most expensive homes, by mid-afternoon.

The flames had destroyed eight structures, damaged five others and prompted the University of California at Los Angeles, about 3.2 km from the Getty Center, to close for the day, along with a number of public schools.

Los Angeles Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas said his firefighte­rs had told him “they were literally overwhelme­d” in the early hours of the Getty fire. “They had to make some tough decisions on which houses they were able to protect.”

Officials at the Getty said the fire was burning north of the building, which was designed with thick stone walls to protect its world-renowned art treasures.

Mayor Eric Garcetti told a news conference property losses could rise, urging residents in the mandatory evacuation zone, which encompasse­s more than 10,000 homes and businesses, to get out quickly.

Commuters posted videos on social media of entire hillsides engulfed in orange flames at the highway’s edge.

Kathleen Crandell, a 33-year-old resident of the Pacific Palisades neighbourh­ood adjacent to sprawling parkland in L.A.’s coastal foothills, said she managed to grab her two cats and a handful of other belongings as she fled.

“This little thing is like a bad dream,” Crandell said in an interview with local radio station KPCC.

The fire was stoked by sustained winds of 30 to 40 miles per hour, gusting to 80 km/h, weather officials said.

The governor said the hot, dry “Devil Winds” fuelling the Kincade had already begun to abate on Monday, giving crews a break, but National Weather Service forecaster­s said they could return later in the week.

Sonoma County has been hardest hit in the latest spate of more than a dozen California wildfires, with more than 260 square km burned and 190,000 people evacuated.

The cause of the Kincade remained under investigat­ion, although PG&E Corp has acknowledg­ed the blaze ignited near a damaged high-voltage transmissi­on tower at about the time a malfunctio­n of the line occurred.

More than one million homes and businesses were without electricit­y on Monday morning, most of those from planned, precaution­ary power outages.

Forecasts of high winds prompted PG&E to shut off power to 940,000 customers in 43 counties on Saturday night to guard against the risk of touching off wildfires.

PG&E said it expects to issue a weather all-clear for safety inspection­s and restoratio­n work to begin on Monday for the northern Sierras and North Coast, the company said.

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 ?? APU GOMES/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A destroyed car is seen as fire continues to burn near the Brentwood area, just west of Beverly Hills, on Monday. The wildfire broke out early Monday near the renowned Getty Center in Los Angeles, forcing widespread evacuation­s.
APU GOMES/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A destroyed car is seen as fire continues to burn near the Brentwood area, just west of Beverly Hills, on Monday. The wildfire broke out early Monday near the renowned Getty Center in Los Angeles, forcing widespread evacuation­s.

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