East Bay Times

More victims who lost homes in Mill Fire sue lumber mill owner

- By Michael McGough

Another lawsuit has been filed against the company that owns a Northern California lumber mill linked to a deadly wildfire that destroyed dozens of homes in Siskiyou County this summer.

A complaint filed in San Francisco Superior Court alleges that Roseburg Forest Products Co. conducted operations at their mill “in a reckless manner that they knew or should have known caused an unreasonab­le risk of catastroph­ic fire.”

The lawsuit, filed Nov. 18 by attorneys with law firm Parkinson Benson Potter on behalf of eight plaintiffs, accuses Roseburg of numerous transgress­ions, including negligence as well as health and safety violations.

The plaintiffs are homeowners and renters whose homes were destroyed by the Mill Fire, including an 88-year-old woman who, according to the lawsuit, was injured while evacuating and “continues to struggle with nightmares, PTSD and related emotional trauma.”

It is at least the fourth civil lawsuit to be brought against Roseburg in connection with the Mill Fire. The 3,935-acre wildfire was sparked Sept. 2 near the city of Weed, destroying more than 115 structures and killing two residents.

The latest lawsuit names Roseburg as well as the mill's safety and operations managers as defendants, claiming the company and its management

“have deliberate­ly, and repeatedly, prioritize­d profits over safety.” The suit seeks compensati­on for property damage and medical expenses, as well as punitive damages.

The official cause of the blaze remains under investigat­ion, but Cal Fire investigat­ors have focused on a wooden warehouse that Roseburg has acknowledg­ed it used to store hot

ash. The company has said that a faulty sprinkler might have allowed the fire to start.

A Sacramento Bee investigat­ion found no evidence that fire inspectors had ever gone inside the wooden warehouse, even as several fires had ignited inside the building over the years.

The recent lawsuit claims Roseburg personnel should have been aware of the region's

very high fire risk because of California's severe drought conditions and the nearby McKinney Fire, also in Siskiyou County, which burned more than 60,000 acres and killed four people just a month earlier.

In the recent 20-page complaint, the plaintiffs' attorneys point to the “obvious risk of fire” presented by the hot ash storage, alleging Roseburg knowingly

operated with a broken fire suppressio­n system.

Roseburg, an Oregonbase­d veneer manufactur­er, resumed full operations at its plant in Siskiyou County on Nov. 9.

According to a company news release, the company removed and replaced its ash mixer and has updated its ash storage protocols. Roseburg said it notified Cal Fire and Siskiyou

County authoritie­s including law enforcemen­t of its reopening plans, according to the news release.

Pete Hillan, a Roseburg spokesman, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the Nov. 18 lawsuit. Hillan has declined to comment on earlier lawsuits linked to the Mill Fire, including one filed by a Weed resident in early October.

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The historical­ly Black Lincoln Heights neighborho­od of Weed sits in ruins Sept. 3, one day after it was largely destroyed in the Mill Fire.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The historical­ly Black Lincoln Heights neighborho­od of Weed sits in ruins Sept. 3, one day after it was largely destroyed in the Mill Fire.

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