The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Hundreds remain missing and at least 63 people dead in California wildfire

DISASTER: Deadly blaze sparks huge evacuation and triggers power cuts

- PAUL ELISA

At least 63 people have died in a northern California wildfire while 631 people are sill unaccounte­d for, authoritie­s have said.

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea revealed the increased missing persons total at a news conference on Thursday, having put the figure at 130 a day earlier.

Mr Honea said the original total was a partial count, and that after authoritie­s went back through all emergency calls and other reports of missing people from the past week, they came up with the new number.

The list probably included some who had fled the blaze and did not realise they had been reported missing, he added.

“The chaos that we were dealing with was extraordin­ary,” he said of the early crisis hours last week.

“Now we’re trying to go back out and make sure that we’re accounting for everyone.”

Authoritie­s also reported seven more fatalities, bringing the total to 63, in the deadliest wildfire in state history.

Ten years ago, as two wildfires advanced on the town of Paradise, residents jumped into their vehicles to flee and got stuck in gridlock.

That led authoritie­s to devise a staggered evacuation plan – one that they used when fire came again last week.

But Paradise’s carefully laid plans quickly devolved into a panicked exodus.

Some survivors said that by the time they got warnings, the flames were already extremely close, and they barely escaped with their lives. Others said they received no warnings at all.

Now authoritie­s are facing questions over whether they took the right approach.

Reeny Victoria Breevaart, who lives in Magalia, a forested community of 11,000 people north of Paradise, said she could not receive warnings because mobile phones were not working. She also lost electrical power.

Mr Honea said evacuation orders were issued through 5,227 emails, 25,643 phone calls and 5,445 texts, in addition to social media and the use of loudspeake­rs.

As mobile phone services went down, authoritie­s went into neighbourh­oods with bullhorns to tell people to leave.

On Thursday, firefighte­rs reported progress in battling the nearly 220-square-mile blaze that displaced 52,000 people and destroyed more than 9,500 homes. It was 40% contained, fire officials said.

In Southern California, crews continued to gain ground against a blaze of more than 153 square miles that destroyed more than 500 structures in Malibu and communitie­s. At least three deaths were reported.

 ??  ?? Volunteer rescue workers search for human remains in the rubble of burned homes in Paradise, California. Picture: AP.
Volunteer rescue workers search for human remains in the rubble of burned homes in Paradise, California. Picture: AP.

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