Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Crews hit California fires another day

Dangerous winds in forecast as two Orange County blazes continue to burn

- CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER AND OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Stefanie Dazio and Amy Taxin of The Associated Press.

LOS ANGELES — Crews tried to beat back two out-ofcontrol wildfires in Southern California on Tuesday that have kept tens of thousands of people out of their homes even as another round of dangerous fire weather raises the risk for flames erupting across the state.

Fierce winds that drove twin fires through brushy hills near cities in Orange County a day earlier were expected to pick back up, although not to the earlier extremes, according to the National Weather Service.

Southern California Edison reported to regulators that it was investigat­ing whether its equipment might have sparked the Silverado Fire near the city of Irvine. With utility equipment blamed for several destructiv­e fires in recent years, Edison was among the utilities in California that deliberate­ly cut power to prevent equipment from being knocked down or hit with debris in the winds and sparking wildfires.

Irvine residents had to evacuate after a fire broke out early Monday, while later and a few miles away, another blaze, the Blue Ridge Fire, sent people fleeing from the Yorba Linda area. New evacuation­s were ordered Tuesday as others were lifted. More than 70,000 people remained out of their homes.

At least 10 homes were damaged and crews protected hundreds more as winds pushed flames down ridges toward neighborho­ods. There

was little containmen­t of the fires, which continued to grow throughout the day.

Forecasts call for Santa Ana winds to keep blowing, with some of the strongest gusts howling through Orange County, where the major blazes are. The winds were expected to be lighter than a day earlier and die down by nightfall.

The gusts were so strong Monday that they toppled several semi-trucks on highways and forced firefighte­rs to ground their aircraft, though they got back up by late afternoon and were expected to fly Tuesday.

Two firefighte­rs, one 26 and the other, 31, remained in critical condition after being injured while battling the larger blaze

near Irvine, according to the county’s fire authority, which didn’t provide details on how the injuries occurred. They each suffered second- and third-degree burns over large portions of their bodies and were at a hospital with their families by their sides, said fire authority

Chief Brian Fennessey.

Southern California Edison cut power to about 38,000 homes and businesses, although it restored some power by Monday night.

In Northern California, easing winds allowed Pacific Gas & Electric to begin restoring power after the largest of five safety shutoffs this year.

A red-flag warning of extreme fire danger was in place Tuesday in the Santa Cruz Mountains near the San Francisco Bay Area and some coastal and valley areas, with warnings extending into Tuesday evening for some higher elevations in the Bay Area.

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