Las Vegas Review-Journal

Santa Rosa fires blamed on high winds

- The Associated Press

SANTA ROSA, Calif. — Power lines buffeted by heavy winds ignited at least two small fires the night of Oct. 8 in Northern California neighborho­ods, according to investigat­ors.

The findings by the Santa Rosa Fire Department are the first public reports into what caused some of the dozens of blazes that erupted that night and became the deadliest and most destructiv­e wildfires in California history, the (Santa Rosa) Press Democrat reported Saturday.

The city’s investigat­ions focused on two lesser-known fires that burned separately from the large blazes that swept across the region, destroying 6,200 homes and claiming 40 lives.

In both cases, a fire that destroyed two homes and another that damaged an outbuildin­g, investigat­ors ruled that winds had caused PG&E power lines to throw sparks, Fire Marshal Scott Moon wrote.

The city reports, completed late last year and early this year, come as parallel investigat­ions by Cal

Fire and the state Public Utilities Commission continue into the cause of the devastatin­g fires.

Those inquiries, expected to hold the most sway in assigning any responsibi­lity for the fires’ causes, could be months or more away from completion, according to state officials.

PG&E spokeswoma­n Deanna Contreras declined to comment on the new reports or the mounting number of lawsuits filed by burned-out residents against the utility giant in connection with October’s fires.

More than 100 lawsuits filed by displaced residents are pending before a San Francisco judge. They claim that the utility failed to maintain and repair its power lines and prepare for the kind of high winds that were forecast and arrived that night.

In addition, Sonoma County government officials last week announced their plans to sue PG&E, seeking tens of millions of dollars in damages to compensate for debris removal costs and damaged infrastruc­ture. Napa, Solano, Yuba, Lake and Mendocino counties are expected to join the case, officials said.

Insurance claims from the Northern California fires have grown to $10 billion, with the largest share of losses in Sonoma County, where 5,130 homes burned and 24 people were killed.

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