Lodi News-Sentinel

California fires cause at least $1B in damage

Nearly 7,000 buildings destroyed in deadly wildfires

- By Janie Har and Michael R. Blood

SAN FRANCISCO — The wildfires that have devastated Northern California this month caused at least $1 billion in damage to insured property, officials said Thursday, as authoritie­s increased the count of homes and other buildings destroyed to nearly 7,000.

Both numbers were expected to rise as crews continued assessing areas scorched by the blazes that killed 42 people, a total that makes it the deadliest series of fires in state history.

State Insurance Commission­er Dave Jones said the preliminar­y dollar valuation of losses came from claims filed with the eight largest insurance companies in the affected areas and did not include uninsured property.

The loss total was expected to climb “probably dramatical­ly so,” Jones told reporters, making it likely the fires also would become the costliest in California’s history.

The initial insurance total covered 4,177 partial residentia­l losses, 5,449 total residentia­l losses, 35 rental and condominiu­m losses, 601 commercial property losses, more than 3,000 vehicle losses, 150 farm or agricultur­al equipment losses, and 39 boats.

Those figures included some fire losses in Southern California — several dozen structures were destroyed or damaged in an Orange County fire — though most were from the northern part of the state, agency officials said.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection’s estimate of homes and structures destroyed was boosted to 6,900 from 5,700 as fire crews returned to hard-hit neighborho­ods and assessed remote and rural areas they could not get to earlier, spokesman Daniel Berlant said.

He said most of the newly counted destroyed buildings burned on Oct. 8 and Oct. 9 — when the wildfires broke out in wine country north of San Francisco and other nearby areas.

“The estimates are in structures and are mostly homes, but also includes commercial structures and outbuildin­gs like barns and sheds,” Berlant said.

Twenty-two of the 42 deaths in California’s October fires happened in a Sonoma County wildfire, making it the third-deadliest in California history. A 1933 Los Angeles fire that killed 29 people was the deadliest, followed by the 1991 Oakland Hills fire, which killed 25.

When adjusted for inflation, the Oakland Hills fire is believed the costliest fire in California history at $2.8 billion. It destroyed about half as many homes and other buildings as the current series of fires.

California Gov. Jerry Brown late Wednesday issued an executive order to speed up recovery efforts as fire authoritie­s say they’ve stopped the progress of wildfires.

 ?? GENARO MOLINA/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Left: Lloyd Dillion, 63, looks at the wreckage of his home on Mocha Lane in the Coffee Park neighborho­od of Santa Rosa, on Wednesday.
GENARO MOLINA/LOS ANGELES TIMES Left: Lloyd Dillion, 63, looks at the wreckage of his home on Mocha Lane in the Coffee Park neighborho­od of Santa Rosa, on Wednesday.

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