Lodi News-Sentinel

Problems occurred in chaos of evacuating from fast Carr Fire

- By Joseph Serna and Louis Sahagun

REDDING — It was a week ago when the Carr Fire barreled out of the foothills and took aim at this city, with hot winds launching embers well ahead of the main blaze and engulfing neighborho­ods along bends in the Sacramento River.

When the flames approached western Redding, Shasta County officials issued mandatory evacuation orders. But those warnings may not have reached everyone amid the chaos. A woman and her two great-grandchild­ren were trapped in their home when the fire hit. She placed a wet blanket on the kids and huddled over them, but that was no match for the Carr Fire. All three died.

Authoritie­s said they did everything they could to alert residents to the coming danger — using social media, reverse 911 calls and public announceme­nts. But, officials acknowledg­ed, there may have been shortfalls given the ferocious nature of the fire that night.

“It’s highly possible they didn’t get a notificati­on,” said Sherry Bartolo, operations manager for Shasta County’s emergency dispatch system. “In my 38-year career, I’ve never had anything that was that devastatin­g to my staff. Now I know what Napa and Santa Rosa and those agencies went through. I couldn’t imagine it until I went through it.”

The four civilian deaths in the Carr Fire — including a man Sunday with serious medical problems whose family said he was unable to get out without assistance — add to an unpreceden­ted year of loss.

With temperatur­es ever warming and blazes burning faster and hotter, California has never recorded a more destructiv­e fire year: More than 10,000 homes have been lost and dozens of people killed since October. More than 40 died that month when fires swept through wine country, sparking debate about why the government could not do more to warn people in the path of the flames. Similar concerns were voiced in January, when mudslides killed more than 20 in Montecito, an area primed for devastatio­n after the Thomas fire burned through a month before.

Officials and experts say California needs to figure out how to improve its emergency alert system.

“This is not a perfect world, but people like me think there’s a way to lessen the loss of life,” said Richard Rudman, vice chair of California’s Emergency Alert System. “We need an overall learning strategy so everyone is reading out of the same playbook.”

Officials are still assessing the evacuation process for the Carr fire, but the disasters in wine country and Santa Barbara County revealed serious flaws in the warning systems.

A state report released last year found that Sonoma County emergency managers failed to use all means possible to warn residents during October’s deadly fire siege. Evacuation orders went to only a fraction of residents, and managers quickly lost track of the fast-moving blazes, leaving entire communitie­s in the dark about their danger.

A Los Angeles Times investigat­ion of the fire response found problems that included a lack of coordinati­on among various agencies and vendors, the use of outdated landline lists to send emergency calls and serious flaws with a federal cellphone alert system.

In the wake of the disasters in Sonoma and Santa Barbara counties, lawmakers have pushed for reforms, including mandates that authoritie­s use up-to-date warning systems and a plan to automatica­lly enroll residents in emergency notificati­on systems, leaving it to residents to opt out.

When the Carr Fire moved toward Redding, authoritie­s sent out updates through reverse 911 calls — a method that has proved unreliable in the past — as well as text messages to residents who had subscribed to the county’s emergency warning system. When they had time, authoritie­s posted the latest news to social media. The county used Amber Alert-style messages three times, records show.

But not everything worked out as planned. A citywide evacuation order was issued for Shasta Lake, though only the community of Summit City on the town’s west side was notified, authoritie­s said.

Farther south, along Quartz Hill Road in Redding, Ed Bledsoe said he never got word that he and his family were supposed to flee. Not long after he left his home to run errands July 26, he got a frantic call from his wife back in their trailer. The fire was fast approachin­g her and their great-grandchild­ren, and they begged Bledsoe to come back to rescue them. But he was too late. The fire, driven by galeforce winds and feeding on timber dried out by days of triple-digit temperatur­es, overwhelme­d Bledsoe’s neighborho­od. His family was lost.

Elizabeth Barkley, acting commander of the California Highway Patrol’s Northern Division, was at the intersecti­on of Placer Street and Buenaventu­ra Boulevard when the fire shifted its direction to the northwest. Officials began mass evacuation­s about 7 p.m., she said, and she raced door-to-door imploring people to leave. Traffic was sent out of the city on wrong-way lanes. Dispatcher­s began fielding 911 calls for rescues.

Officials left one flag at the front of homes where residents agreed to leave and two flags if they didn’t or if no one was home, said Shasta County Undersheri­ff Eric Magrini. Bledsoe’s property was too badly scorched Wednesday to determine if it had been visited.

“I know we were in that area conducting evacuation­s. We had saturated that area, everybody was leaving,” Magrini said. “It was very chaotic. But we were managing the chaos at the time.”

But he also stressed that the area was faced with an unpreceden­ted situation. “If you told me a week ago that this fire in the French Gulch area was going to downtown Redding, I would’ve called you a liar,” Magrini said. “I’ve never see anything like it. I hope I never see anything like it again.”

The Bledsoes lived in a hideaway kind of neighborho­od, in oak-and-hill country of northwest Redding.

Their property, like many others in the area, was large and decorated with vintage farming equipment fronting a slender two-lane road.

The night the fire arrived, its embers quickly leapfrogge­d from house to house as the oak trees that gave them cool shade this time of year became fuel.

Several structures on the property were reduced to piles of twisted metal siding, brick and metal bed springs and shattered pottery.

 ?? MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Firefighte­rs from S&R Contractin­g in Oregon dig into the ground as they mop up hot spots near Redding on Monday.
MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES Firefighte­rs from S&R Contractin­g in Oregon dig into the ground as they mop up hot spots near Redding on Monday.

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