Philippine Daily Inquirer

HOW far did wildfires darken California skies?

Air turns deadly, brings respirator­y diseases to fleeing residents

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SACRAMENTO— California’s deadly wildfires have darkened the skies for more than 200 kilometers, causing respirator­y problems and making it hard to see the sun not only in the state’s wine country but as far as San Francisco and Sacramento.

Wind-driven smoke and soot forced coastal San Franciscan­s to breathe air as dirty as that in parts of Beijing on Thursday and Friday.

School districts far away from the fire zone urged parents to keep children with respirator­y illnesses at home and at least one university canceled classes.

“I have asthma and allergies, and my chest really hurts,” said Beatriz Lerma, a white face mask over her mouth and nose in a clinic at an evacuation center in Petaluma, west of the fires.

Since the deadly fires began amid hurricane-force winds on Sunday night, the air has turned unhealthy or hazardous not only in hard-hit Sonoma and Napa counties, where the worst fires are burning, but in locations 80 km or more, said Melanie Turner, a spokespers­on for the California Air Resources Board.

Gray everywhere

Moving with the wind, the bad air brings eerie daytime gray to far-flung communitie­s and turns the sun orange.

“The smoke is moving around and it’s changing all the time,” Turner said.

Concern over air quality prompted so much traffic on a government website that tracks it, AirNow.gov, that it crashed intermitte­ntly Thursday and Friday.

The poor air was just one strain on the region’s already stretched health care system.

The Kaiser Permanente medical center that serves Sonoma County has been closed since Monday along with its pharmacy, and throughout the Northern San Francisco Bay Area, doctors who have lost their own homes to fires are still caring for patients in evacuation centers.

The Kaiser Permanente organizati­on, a national nonprofit medical provider, said Friday it was increasing its supplies of respirator­y medica- tions in Northern California and reaching out to families with young children and others at risk for breathing ailments.

Firefighte­rs faced more dry, windy conditions on Friday that could whip up wildfires in Northern California that have killed at least 32 people and left hundreds missing in the heart of wine country.

Death while sleeping

The most lethal wildfires in California’s history have killed people while they slept in their beds and prompted authoritie­s to order thousands of residents from their homes.

Paramedics said children and others with respirator­y problems suffered from shortness of breath, chest pain, dizziness and nausea, and local fire department­s and others brought oxygen tanks to evacuation centers to ease the suffering.

State assemblyma­n Jim Wood and his staff delivered about 200 specialize­d face masks used to protect against smoke and other particulat­es in the air, a spokespers­on said.

“A lot of the people having respirator­y problems have weaker immune systems, like children or elderly patients,” said Megan Teutschel, a paramedic who was volunteeri­ng at the Petaluma evacuation center clinic.

 ?? —AP ?? Afireman walks near a flaming house in Santa Rosa as the California wildfire continued to consume everything in its path, leaving nothing but posts (top photo) in this house also in Santa Rosa.
—AP Afireman walks near a flaming house in Santa Rosa as the California wildfire continued to consume everything in its path, leaving nothing but posts (top photo) in this house also in Santa Rosa.

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