Lodi News-Sentinel

Oroville wildfire evacuees return

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OROVILLE — Relief was arriving after a rough stretch of wildfires all around the U.S. West, with firefighte­rs slowly surroundin­g once-fierce blazes and evacuees starting to stream back home.

Officials on Wednesday downgraded the number of structures threatened by a Northern California fire from several thousand to roughly 600. Authoritie­s surveying the damage said at least 41 homes and 55 other buildings had been destroyed near the town of Oroville.

Some residents had returned home after fleeing the flames in the grassy foothills of the Sierra Nevada, about 60 miles north of Sacramento, but thousands remained evacuated as the fire entered its fifth day.

The blaze burned nearly 9 square miles and injured four firefighte­rs. Containmen­t was more than half.

Crews were making progress against dozens of wildfires across the western U.S.

In Colorado, crews were winding down the fight against a wildfire that temporaril­y forced hundreds of people to evacuate near the resort town of Breckenrid­ge. Firefighte­rs built containmen­t lines around at least 85 percent of the blaze.

In Arizona, recent monsoon rain has helped stop the growth of a wildfire in mountains overlookin­g Tucson and an evacuation order for the summer-retreat community of Summerhave­n has been lifted.

In Nevada, fire crews were getting the upper hand on a wildland blaze that shut down U.S. Interstate 80 along the Nevada-California line most of Tuesday.

Three new California fires made trouble Tuesday.

One of them, just east of San Jose, destroyed two homes before its growth was stopped.

Another broke out in San Diego County and quickly surged to over half a square mile. It forced the temporary closure of Interstate 8 and the brief evacuation of 15 families in Alpine, a town of 15,000 people about 50 miles northeast of San Diego.

In Northern California, the Placer County Sheriff’s Office issued mandatory evacuation­s along four roads near a 2-acre fire burning north of Auburn.

In Santa Barbara County, at least 3,500 people remained out of their homes due to a pair of fires. The larger of the two charred more than 45 square miles of dry brush and has burned 20 structures since it broke out. To the south, crews are working to fully contain an 18-squaremile wildfire that destroyed 20 structures.

Elsewhere, investigat­ors have determined that lightning ignited a wildfire that has burned about 3 square miles of timber in a southeast Wyoming national forest. The fire burning in the Keystone area of Medicine Bow National Forest began July 3.

 ?? AL SEIB/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Vehicles burned at The Outdoor School at Rancho Alegre Boy Scout camp on Monday along State Highway 154 in the Santa Ynez Valley of Santa Barbara County, in the Whittier Fire.
AL SEIB/LOS ANGELES TIMES Vehicles burned at The Outdoor School at Rancho Alegre Boy Scout camp on Monday along State Highway 154 in the Santa Ynez Valley of Santa Barbara County, in the Whittier Fire.

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