Imperial Valley Press

Weather moderating as Southern California wildfire burns

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Helicopter­s and airplanes bombarded burning ranch lands with water and retardant Friday in an effort to prevent any more of the wildfire destructio­n that has marked October in California.

The latest fire erupted about 70 miles southeast of Los Angeles even as firefighte­rs neared full containmen­t of the month’s devastatin­g infernos in Northern California and authoritie­s made an arrest in connection with a blaze south of San Francisco.

Some 200 homes were under evacuation orders as firefighte­rs fought a 2-dayold blaze that had scorched 850 acres in southweste­rn Riverside County near Lake Elsinore and the Cleveland National Forest.

The evacuation­s in La Cresta, a community south of Lake Elsinore, were lifted Friday evening and the blaze was 50 percent contained.

Despite spreading rapidly after it was ignited Thursday, the fire had not burned any structures, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection reported.

The fire began in the Wildomar Off-Highway Vehicle Area. A dirt bike on an off-road trail crashed into a tree and gasoline ignited. The 18-year-old rider had minor injuries.

Southern California weather continued to run very warm and dry due to high pressure aloft and weak offshore flow, but the dangerous Santa Ana winds that had been gusting just days earlier were absent.

Cooler weather was expected Sunday through Tuesday, followed by a modest warm-up, and then a significan­t change to more fall-like weather as low pressure develops along the West Coast with possible rain over much of the state, the National Weather Service said.

In Northern California, firefighte­rs were putting out hotspots and repairing damage caused by suppressio­n of firestorms that erupted amid fierce winds on Oct. 8, Cal Fire said. The major fire complexes ranged from 95 percent to 98 percent surrounded.

At the peak of the firestorm, there were 21 major wildfires that burned a combined total of more than 383 square miles, forced 100,000 people to flee their homes, destroyed 8,800 structures and took 42 lives.

South of San Francisco, authoritie­s announced the arrested of a man they alleged started a fire in the Santa Cruz Mountains that destroyed two homes and injured seven firefighte­rs.

Santa Cruz County Sheriff Jim Hart said Marlon Coy, 54, was arrested on suspicion of arson, looting, burglary, causing great bodily injury to firefighte­rs, and destroying forests.

Coy intentiona­lly started the fire on the night of Oct. 16 after getting into a dispute with a neighbor, Hart said.

Deputies first detained Coy last week after he was allegedly spotted stealing from evacuated homes. It wasn’t immediatel­y known if Coy had retained a lawyer.

It took firefighte­rs 10 days to contain the blaze that scorched 400 acres in the mountain range south of San Francisco and killed a pet cat.

Officials are still investigat­ing what started the huge blazes that burned in Napa, Sonoma, Yuba and Mendocino counties.

 ??  ?? In this Friday still image taken from a video provided by KABC-TV, a wildfire burns in Cleveland National Forest in Wildomar. The fire began early Thursday afternoon in the Wildomar Off-Highway Vehicle Area in the Cleveland National Forest, about 70...
In this Friday still image taken from a video provided by KABC-TV, a wildfire burns in Cleveland National Forest in Wildomar. The fire began early Thursday afternoon in the Wildomar Off-Highway Vehicle Area in the Cleveland National Forest, about 70...

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