Dayton Daily News

Fires take at least 6 lives, force thousands to evacuate

- By Janie Har and Martha Mendoza

Sky-darkening wildfires that took at least six lives and forced tens of thousands from their homes blazed throughout California on Friday as firefighti­ng resources strained under the vastness of the infernos authoritie­s were trying to control.

Three major complexes encompassi­ng dozens of fires chewed through a combined 780 square miles of forests, canyons and rural areas flanking San Francisco on three sides.

Statewide, nearly 12,000 firefighte­rs are battling blazes that have scorched more than 1,200 square miles in California, said Daniel Berlant, assistant deputy director for the state Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire.

Crews from Oregon, Idaho and Arizona have arrived to relieve local firefighte­rs, he said, with engines on their way from as far away as Maryland and New Jersey.

Tens of thousands of homes were threatened by flames that drove through dense and bone-dry trees and brush. Many of the fires were sparked by lightning strikes from brief thundersto­rms — nearly 12,000 since last weekend — as a high-pressure area over the West brought a dangerous mix of triple-digit weather and monsoonal moisture pulled from the south.

Some fires doubled in size within 24 hours, fire officials said.

And while some evacuation­s were lifted in the small city of Vacaville, between San Francisco and Sacramento, other areas expanded their evacuation areas. The University of California, Santa Cruz, was evacuated, and a new fire burning near Yosemite National Park also prompted evacuation­s.

Santa Cruz itself, a coastal city of 65,000, wasn’t affected. But Mayor Justin Cummings urged residents Thursday evening to be prepared to evacuate by gassing up their vehicles and packing important documents, medicines and other belongings.

“Prepare early so that you are ready to go at a moment’s notice,” Cummings said.

More than 64,000 people have been ordered to evacuate in San Mateo and Santa Cruz counties, which make up part of Silicon Valley and hug the coast south of San Francisco.

With firefighti­ng resources tight, homes in remote, hardto-get-to places burned unattended. Cal Fire Chief Mark Brunton pleaded with evacuees to quit battling fires on their own, saying that just causes more problems for profession­als.

“We had last night three separate rescues that pulled our vital, very few resources away,” he said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A forest burns as fire advances in Bonny Doon, California. Nealy 12,000 firefighte­rs are battling blazes that have scorched more than 1,200 square miles.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A forest burns as fire advances in Bonny Doon, California. Nealy 12,000 firefighte­rs are battling blazes that have scorched more than 1,200 square miles.

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