Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fire victims were already living on edge,

- BY JONATHAN J. COOPER

CHICO, Calif. — Bob Talk hadn’t even transferre­d the title for his new trailer — the one that was supposed to get him off the streets — when Northern California’s deadly wildfire whipped through and turned it to ash. He had lived in the trailer park in Paradise for all of three days.

Talk is now among hundreds of people still in a shelter a month later.

The future is uncertain for all of the fire’s victims, but it’s uniquely challengin­g for the many like Talk who were already living on the edge, homeless or nearly so, before escaping with their lives and little else.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do,” Talk said as he ate fruit and salad in the dining hall of a Red Cross shelter, his dog on his lap. “But I’m not going to leave this town.”

Talk, 61, said he had set aside $500 a month from a public assistance check to buy the trailer for $3,500. The plan was to move in with his 39-year-old daughter and host a Christmas party. The extended family would be excited to be off the street. But his daughter was struck and killed by a car while riding her bike Oct. 3.

When the flames swept through Butte County on Nov. 8, killing at least 85 people in the nation’s deadliest wildfire in a century, Talk hitched a ride to safety with a sheriff’s deputy. He ended up staying in a Walmart parking lot in nearby Chico that became an unofficial shelter, where people with nowhere else to go pitched tents or slept in their cars.

Last week, the final holdouts, including Talk, were sent to the Red Cross shelter at the Silver Dollar Fairground­s in Chico.

Talk wasn’t sure how long he would stay — “Maybe I’ll meet my future ex-wife in here,” he joked — or what he would do next. But he knows he will be in Chico, where he was born and raised before he started working at carnivals for 40 years.

“I like adventure,” he said. “Every time I walk out that door I make an adventure.”

The shelter gets him out of the cold and lets him come and go as he pleases. His only complaint: There’s a designated area to smoke cigarettes but nowhere to light up marijuana, which is legal in California.

Eighteen percent of the people in Butte County, population 230,000, live in poverty. The median household income is about $47,000 — $20,000 less than the statewide figure.

The Red Cross is consolidat­ing shelters that cropped up across Northern California into one center at the fairground­s, where about 450 people were staying as of Wednesday night.

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