Lodi News-Sentinel

Lumber company settles Mill Fire lawsuits

- Michael McGough

An Oregon wood products manufactur­er that operates a Northern California lumber mill linked to September’s deadly Mill Fire has reached settlement agreements with most of those who brought claims against the company, attorneys for the company and for fire victims said Tuesday.

Roseburg Forest Co. in a news release said it has agreed in principle with four law firms representi­ng the “majority of claims to settle the families’ property losses, personal injuries and wrongful death claims arising from the Sept. 2 Mill Fire.”

The terms and amounts of the settlement­s will remain confidenti­al.

The Mill Fire sparked near the city of Weed in Siskiyou County, charring 3,935 acres, killing two residents and destroying more than 115 buildings, most of them homes, while damaging dozens more.

The cause of the deadly Mill Fire has not been officially determined. But Cal Fire personnel have focused their investigat­ion on a wooden warehouse Roseburg has acknowledg­ed it used to store hot ash.

Robert Julian, Roseburg’s lead attorney in the settlement­s, said the company had a mediation last week with five law firms representi­ng the bulk of roughly 1,000 claimants related to the Mill Fire.

Roseburg reached agreements with four of the involved firms, representi­ng more than 700 people affected by the Mill Fire. Julian said another mediation is scheduled for Thursday, in which the company hopes to reach settlement­s with all remaining claimants.

Attorney Russell Reiner said his Reddingbas­ed

firm represents more than 600 clients affected by the fire.

Those clients include plaintiffs who have filed wrongful death claims, bodily injury claims, persons who fled the fire, timber losses, 50 families who lost their homes and other personal property claims including the loss of cherished items in the blaze.

“My firm has reached with Roseburg an agreement, in principle, that will need to be approved by each of my clients,” Reiner told The Sacramento Bee on Tuesday morning.

“These are individual settlement­s, and under the terms of the agreement, the settlement­s when agreed upon will be confidenti­al.”

The three other firms reaching agreements were: Parkinson Benson Potter; Singleton Schreiber; and Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy.

Reiner said his firm’s settlement agreement was reached Monday night.

Though the settlement­s and their amounts will be confidenti­al, the intent is that some of the involved money received by homeowners will be used to rebuild homes that burned down in Lincoln Heights,

Lake Shastina and along Hoy Road, Reiner said.

Roseburg in its news release said the settlement­s will be a “catalyst for (the) rebuild of Weed” communitie­s.

Lincoln Heights, a historic Black neighborho­od, was ravaged by the Mill Fire.

“It is my clients’ firm desire to rebuild Lincoln Heights,” Reiner said. “I’ve been honored by my clients who have placed their trust in me, to represent them, to give them a voice, to be heard for their tragic losses.”

The announceme­nt of settlement agreements comes a little more than three months after the Mill Fire.

“We were able to get together very quickly and settle,” Julian said. “My hope is to have all the claims resolved” after Thursday’s mediation.

Julian, who represente­d some 70,000 fire victims in PG&E’s bankruptcy case, said the settlement­s were reached promptly because the involved lawyers have significan­t experience dealing with wildfire litigation. He also noted that Roseburg has experience­d timber losses from Oregon wildfires in recent years, adding that Roseburg is “very sensitive to the community.”

What caused the Mill Fire near Weed?

A Sacramento Bee investigat­ion published in October found no evidence that fire inspectors had ever gone inside the wooden warehouse Roseburg used to store its hot ash, even as several fires had ignited inside the building over the years.

The company has also said a faulty sprinkler system may have allowed the Mill Fire to start.

The two victims killed in the fire were Lorenza Mondoc Glover, 65, and Marilyn Hilliard, 73.

Glover’s son, Joselito Bereso Candasa, in September filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Roseburg. Glover, a widowed hotel housekeepe­r and Lincoln Heights resident, died Sept. 2 as she tried to escape the blaze, Candasa’s lawsuit said.

Roseburg has been listed as the defendant in at least four civil lawsuits related to the fire, including one filed Nov. 18 in San Francisco Superior Court in which eight plaintiffs — all residents whose homes were damaged or destroyed — sued the company seeking compensati­on and punitive damages.

 ?? RYAN SABALOW/SACRAMENTO BEE ?? Burned homes stand in the Lincoln Heights neigborhoo­d of Weed on Sept. 3, after the Mill Fire tore through the area the day before.
RYAN SABALOW/SACRAMENTO BEE Burned homes stand in the Lincoln Heights neigborhoo­d of Weed on Sept. 3, after the Mill Fire tore through the area the day before.

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