Dayton Daily News

Calif. wildfire forces more evacuation­s

Foothills northwest of L.A. burn; winds, no rain in forecast.

- By Christophe­r Weber

A major flare-up on the western edge of Southern California’s largest destructiv­e wildfire sent residents fleeing.

— A flare-up on LOS ANGELES the western edge of Southern California’s largest and most destructiv­e wildfire sent residents fleeing Sunday, as wind-fanned flames churned through canyons and down hillsides toward coastal towns.

Crews with help from water-dropping aircraft saved several homes as unpredicta­ble gusts sent the blaze churning deeper into foothill areas northwest of Los Angeles that haven’t burned in decades. New evacuation­s were ordered in Carpinteri­a, a seaside city in Santa Barbara County that has been under fire threat for days.

“The winds are kind of squirrely right now,” said county fire spokesman Mike Eliason. “Some places the smoke is going straight up in the air, and others it’s blowing sideways. Depends on what canyon we’re in.”

The department posted a photo of one residence engulfed in flames before dawn. It’s unclear whether other structures burned. Thousands of homes in the county were without power.

Firefighte­rs made significan­t progress Saturday on other fronts of the enormous fire that started Dec. 4 in neighborin­g Ventura County. Containmen­t was way up on other major blazes in Los Angeles, Riverside and San Diego counties.

Forecaster­s said Santa Ana winds that whipped fires across the region last week would continue in some areas at least through Monday evening.

A lack of rain has officials on edge statewide because of parched conditions and no end in sight to the typical fire season.

“This is the new normal,” Gov. Jerry Brown warned Saturday after surveying damage from the deadly Ventura fire. “We’re about ready to have firefighti­ng at Christmas. This is very odd and unusual.”

High fire risk is expected to last into January and the governor and experts said climate change is making it a year-round threat.

Overall, the fires have destroyed nearly 800 homes and other buildings, killed dozens of horses and forced more than 200,000 people to flee flames that have burned over 270 square miles (700 square kilometers) since Dec. 4. One death, so far, a 70-year-old woman who crashed her car on an evacuation route, is attributed to the fire in Santa Paula, a small city where the fire began.

The Ventura County blaze continued to burn into rugged mountains in the Los Padres National Forest near the little town of Ojai and toward a preserve establishe­d for endangered California condors.

Ojai experience­d hazardous levels of smoke at times and officials warned of unhealthy air for large swaths of the region. The South Coast Air Quality Management District urged residents to stay indoors if possible and avoid vigorous outdoor activities.

As fires burned in Ventura and Los Angeles counties, firefighte­rs were already in place north of San Diego on Thursday when a major fire erupted and rapidly spread in the Fallbrook area, known for its avocado groves and horse stables in the rolling hills.

The fire swept through the San Luis Rey Training Facility, where it killed more than 40 elite thoroughbr­eds and destroyed more than 100 homes — most of them in a retirement community. Three people were burned trying to escape the fire that continued to smolder Sunday.

Most of last week’s fires were in places that burned in the past, including one in the ritzy Los Angeles neighborho­od of Bel-Air that burned six homes and another in the city’s rugged foothills above the community of Sylmar and in Santa Paula.

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 ?? MARCUS YAM / LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? From left: Jeff Lipscomb, Gabriel Lipscomb, 17, and Rachel Lipscomb, 11, look for items to recover in the wreckage of their burned home on Wednesday in Ventura, Calif., where a major blaze started on Dec. 4.
MARCUS YAM / LOS ANGELES TIMES From left: Jeff Lipscomb, Gabriel Lipscomb, 17, and Rachel Lipscomb, 11, look for items to recover in the wreckage of their burned home on Wednesday in Ventura, Calif., where a major blaze started on Dec. 4.
 ?? MCNEW / GETTY IMAGES JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A firefighte­r sets a backfire to make progress against the Thomas Fire before the winds return with the daylight, near Lake Casitas and Ojai, Calif., Saturday. Santa Ana winds could last until Tuesday.DAVID A burned home in the Rancho Monserate Country Club shows the devastatio­n caused by the Lilac Fire in Fallbrook, Calif., Saturday. “This is very odd and unusual,” Gov. Jerry Brown said.
MCNEW / GETTY IMAGES JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES A firefighte­r sets a backfire to make progress against the Thomas Fire before the winds return with the daylight, near Lake Casitas and Ojai, Calif., Saturday. Santa Ana winds could last until Tuesday.DAVID A burned home in the Rancho Monserate Country Club shows the devastatio­n caused by the Lilac Fire in Fallbrook, Calif., Saturday. “This is very odd and unusual,” Gov. Jerry Brown said.

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