Las Vegas Review-Journal

Evacuation strategy questioned

Fire survivors recall problems as toll tops 60

- By Paul Elias and Kathleen Ronayne • The Associated Press

MAGALIA, Calif. — Ten years ago, as two wildfires advanced on Paradise, residents jumped into their vehicles to flee and got stuck in gridlock. That led authoritie­s to devise a staggered evacuation plan — one that they used when fire came again last week.

But Paradise’s carefully laid plans quickly devolved into a panicked exodus on Nov. 8. Some survivors said that by the time they got warnings, the flames were already extremely close, and they barely escaped with their lives. Others said they received no warnings at all.

WILDFIRES

Now, with at least 63 people dead and more than 630 perhaps unaccounte­d for in the nation’s deadliest wildfire in a century, authoritie­s are facing questions of whether they took the right approach.

It’s also a lesson for other communitie­s across the West that could be threatened as climate change and overgrown forests contribute to longer, more destructiv­e fire seasons .

Reeny Victoria Breevaart, who lives in Magalia, a forested community of 11,000 people north of Paradise, said she couldn’t receive warnings because cellphones weren’t working. She also lost electrical power.

Just over an hour after the first evacuation order was issued at 8 a.m., she said, neighbors came to her door to say: “You have to get out of here.”

Shari Bernacett, who with her husband managed a mobile home park in Paradise where they also lived, received a text ordering an evacuation. “Within minutes the flames were on top of us,” she said.

Bernacett packed two duffel bags while her husband and another neighbor knocked on doors, yelling for people to get out. The couple grabbed their dog and drove through 12-foot flames to escape.

In the aftermath of the disaster, survivors said authoritie­s need to devise a plan to reach residents who can’t get a cellphone signal in the hilly terrain or don’t have cellphones at all.

Several efforts to notify

In his defense, Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said evacuation orders were issued through 5,227 emails, 25,643 phone calls and 5,445 texts, with social media and the use of loudspeake­rs. As cellphone service went down, authoritie­s went into neighborho­ods with bullhorns to tell people to leave, and that saved some lives.

Honea said he was too busy with the emergency and the recovery of human remains to analyze how the evacuation went. But he said it was a big, chaotic, fast-moving situation, and there weren’t enough law enforcemen­t officers to go out and warn everyone.

“The fact that we have thousands and thousands of people in shelters would clearly indicate that we were able to notify a significan­t number of people,” the sheriff said.

Officials also were scrambling to pinpoint everyone’s whereabout­s, and Honea said the high number of missing people probably included some who fled the blaze and didn’t realize they had been reported missing. He added that authoritie­s were making the list public so people could see if they were on it and let authoritie­s know they were safe.

Some evacuees were staying in tents and cars at a Walmart parking lot and in a nearby field in Chico. Volunteers planning to close the makeshift shelter by Sunday were working to move people to other locations.

A Sunday closure “gives us enough time to maybe figure something out,” said Mike Robertson, an evacuee who arrived there Monday with his wife and two daughters.

On Thursday, firefighte­rs reported progress in battling the nearly 220-square-mile blaze, which displaced 52,000 people and destroyed more than 9,500 homes. It was 40 percent contained, fire officials said. Crews slowed the flames’ advance on populated areas.

California Army National Guard members, wearing white jump suits, looked for human remains in the burned rubble, among more than 450 rescue workers assigned to the task.

Plan split town into zones

The Paradise fire once again underscore­d shortcomin­gs in warning systems.

Gov. Jerry Brown signed a bill in September requiring the developmen­t of statewide guidelines for Amber Alert-like warnings. A few Northern California communitie­s are moving to install sirens after some wine country residents complained they didn’t receive warnings to evacuate ahead of a deadly wildfire in October 2017 that destroyed 5,300 homes.

In 2008, the pair of wildfires that menaced Paradise destroyed 130 homes. No one was seriously hurt, but the chaos highlighte­d the need for a plan.

Paradise sits on a ridge between two higher hills, with only one main exit out of town. The best solution seemed to be to order evacuation­s in phases, so people didn’t get trapped.

“Gridlock is always the biggest concern,” said William Stewart, a forestry professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

Authoritie­s developed an evacuation plan that split the town of 27,000 into zones and called for a staggered exodus. Paradise even conducted a mock evacuation during a morning commute, turning the main thoroughfa­re into a oneway street out of town.

Last week, when a wind-whipped fire bore down on the town, the sheriff ’s department attempted an

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i ?? The Associated Press Tashi Nacario and Samantha Salas wear masks Thursday to deal with smoke that shrouds the state Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. Smoke from the Camp Fire, which burned through the Butte County city of Paradise, is creating a health hazard, experts say.
Rich Pedroncell­i The Associated Press Tashi Nacario and Samantha Salas wear masks Thursday to deal with smoke that shrouds the state Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. Smoke from the Camp Fire, which burned through the Butte County city of Paradise, is creating a health hazard, experts say.

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