Hartford Courant

Winds Stoke Deadly Wildfire

Camp Fire Is One Of State’s Deadliest Ever

- By CLEVE R. WOOTSON JR. and JOEL ACHENBACH

THOUSAND OAKS, Calilf. — Already the most destructiv­e wildfire in California history, the Camp Fire in the Sierra Nevada foothills has become one of the state’s deadliest — killing 29 people in three days, with more than 225 people unaccounte­d for in a charred swath of land larger than Detroit.

Although the fire had been 25 percent contained by Sunday, high temperatur­es and gusty winds made the weather optimal for the Northern California fire to spread for at least another day.

As of Saturday, the Camp Fire had destroyed nearly 7,000 structures in and around the mountain town of Paradise and has been blamed for most of the last week’s fire deaths. Two people were also killed as a result of separate fires in Southern California.

But the bulk of firefighte­r resources were focused on the Camp Fire, which has

matched the deadliest fire on record in the state. The 1933 Griffith Park wildfire in Los Angeles County also killed 29.

“This event was the worst-case scenario,” Butte County Sheriff Kory L. Honea said, referring to the Camp Fire. “It’s the event that we have feared for a long time.”

Honea, who is also the county coroner, told the Associated Press that he had to add a fifth search-and-recovery team to help find bodies. Authoritie­s have not released the names of victims and have continued to search for more.

Honea raised the number of people missing Sunday night from 100 to 228.

His office has also ordered an additional DNA lab truck and received help from anthropolo­gists at California State University at Chico for a time-consuming and daunting task: In some cases, investigat­ors have found only pieces of bone.

The smoke, like orange fog, that enveloped Chico and surroundin­g towns Friday gave way to a low-lying haze that spread all the way up to Redding over the weekend, thanks to a shift in winds. As the fire moved on, displaced residents were allowed to return to whatever was left of their homes, in some cases finding only ash and charred foundation­s.

Gov. Jerry Brown, D, requested a presidenti­al major disaster declaratio­n, which would make the hardest-hit communitie­s eligible for housing, unemployme­nt and other support programs and allow state and local government­s to repair or replace fire-damaged facilities and infrastruc­ture. FEMA has already granted a state request for emergency aid.

President Donald Trump has alternated between offering sympathy for displaced people and firefighte­rs, and lashing out at California’s leaders over what he deemed poor forest management.

“With proper Forest Management, we can stop the devastatio­n constantly going on in California. Get Smart!” he tweeted Sunday morning, echoing a criticism that he has frequently leveled at California officials and threatenin­g to withhold federal money.

Officials shot back that increasing­ly destructiv­e fires are a result of global warming, which dries out vegetation and turns large swaths of grassland into a tinderbox.

A spokesman for Brown said that more federal forest land has burned than state land, adding that the state has expanded its forestry budget while the Trump administra­tion has cut its budget for forest services.

Brian K. Rice, president of the California Profession­al Firefighte­rs associatio­n, chided Trump, calling his words “ill-informed, ill-timed and demeaning to those who are suffering as well as the men and women on the front lines.”

As the argument intensifie­d, state firefighte­rs found their resources divided between a historic fire in the north and a pair of fires in the south.

Near Los Angeles, about 200,000 people were displaced by the expanding Woolsey Fire, which began midafterno­on Thursday near Simi Valley, even as fire department­s were responding to a second wildfire, the Hill Fire, just west of Thousand Oaks.

The flames raced from the Conejo Valley to the Pacific Ocean, across Highway101­and the Santa Monica mountains, at speeds that shocked veteran fire officials.

Authoritie­s said two bodies were found, both burned, in Malibu in a vehicle that had been in the path of the wildfire, though homicide investigat­ors are still working that case and have not officially declared a cause of death.

Fire crews, including many from out of state, were deployed throughout areas projected to be in the path of furious Santa Ana winds. The goal is to stamp out any new fires before they expand rapidly, and to continue to try to contain the Woolsey Fire, which has burned more than 83,000 acres, destroyed at least 150 houses and created a massive mandatory evacuation zone in Ventura and Los Angeles counties. But fire officials working in steep terrain that’s hard to reach say they are short of crews and equipment, with many resources deployed in Northern California to fight the Camp Fire.

Informatio­n from the Associated Press is included.

 ?? NOAH BERGER | ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? AS THE Camp Fire burns nearby, a scorched car rests by gas pumps near Pulga, Calif., on Sunday. With 29 deaths, the Camp Fire has matched the deadliest wildfire in California history.
NOAH BERGER | ASSOCIATED PRESS AS THE Camp Fire burns nearby, a scorched car rests by gas pumps near Pulga, Calif., on Sunday. With 29 deaths, the Camp Fire has matched the deadliest wildfire in California history.

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