Las Vegas Review-Journal

California avoids outages but fires threaten homes

Newsom declares statewide emergency

- By Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO — Gov. Gavin Newsom declared an emergency Tuesday over wildfires burning throughout California amid excessive heat while the state’s power grid operator thanked customers for conserving energy in order to avoid rolling blackouts.

The California Independen­t System Operator had warned earlier in the day that many homes and businesses might be affected unless conservati­on measures worked but it lifted an emergency declaratio­n shortly before 8 p.m., tweeting: “We did it!”

Conservati­on measures also helped avoid sweeping outages on Monday but the heat wave blanketing much of the state with triple-digit heat was expected to continue into Wednesday before a few days of slightly cooler weather set in, followed by rising temperatur­es again for the weekend.

At a cooling center in Sacramento, Newsom applauded industries, businesses and residents for driving down energy usage but warned the state was in a “critical 48-hour period.”

“We’re doing everything in our

power to understand the root causes of this,” said Newsom, who on Monday ordered an investigat­ion into outages that occurred on Friday and Saturday.

The state is in a dayslong heatwave that has stressed the electrical system. But the dynamic, humid weather also sparked brief, heavy thundersto­rms and flash flood warnings Tuesday afternoon in some desert and mountain areas.

Lightning strikes also set dozens of fires and thousands of people were under evacuation orders not far from the San Francisco Bay Area, near Salinas in Monterey County, around Oroville Dam north of Sacramento, in remote Mendocino County and near the Nevada state line north of Lake Tahoe.

Newsom declared a statewide emergency Tuesday, saying crews were battling some 30 large fires.

“We are deploying every resource available to keep communitie­s safe as California battles fires across the state during these extreme conditions,” he said.

As the sun set orange and red in smoky skies, evacuation­s were ordered for some parts of Boulder Creek, south of San Francisco, including neighborho­ods around Big Basin Redwoods, California’s oldest state park. Some 5,000 people live in Boulder Creek, a community high in the Santa Cruz mountains.

The many windy, long, forested roads, some paved, some dirt, can easily become blocked during storms or fires.

The orders specify which direction particular neighborho­ods need to go to safely get out.

In California’s wine country, twin blazes sent residents fleeing their homes in Sonoma County. And a fire in Napa County was burning close to remote grape-growing properties owned by Villa Del Lago Winery.

“Our vineyard workers had to evacuate very quickly. And we heard this morning that there was zero containmen­t, so that’s scary. It’s very steep, so I know it’s hard for firefighte­rs to get up there,” said Dawn Phillips, who works in customer service for the winery.

In Southern California, evacuation­s continued for a week-old fire in the mountains of northern Los Angeles County.

 ?? Jae C. Hong The Associated Press ?? Children cool off in a park Tuesday in Fountain Valley, Calif. The state is in a dayslong heat wave that has stressed the electrical system and resulted in rolling blackouts.
Jae C. Hong The Associated Press Children cool off in a park Tuesday in Fountain Valley, Calif. The state is in a dayslong heat wave that has stressed the electrical system and resulted in rolling blackouts.

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