Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Wildfires on the cusp of burning 4 million acres in state this year

Blazes have killed at least 31 and destroyed more than 8,200 structures

- By Alex Wiggleswor­th

Wildfires have burned an unpreceden­ted swath of California this year, scorching nearly 4 million acres — an area larger than Connecticu­t — and killing 31 people, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Previously, California’s worst year of fire was 2018, when more than 1.8 million acres were burned and more than 100 people were killed, according to the National Interagenc­y Coordinati­on Center.

Fires this year have destroyed more than 8,200 structures and, as of Friday, had displaced more than 53,000 from their homes.

The property damage toll has not yet approached that of 2018, when more than 17,000 homes and 700 businesses were destroyed.

Still, the sheer magnitude is staggering. Of the 20 largest wildfires in California’s history, five burned within the space of a couple of months this year, consuming a combined total of nearly 2.4 million acres.

Lightning in August ignited many of California’s biggest blazes, but scientists say climate change has helped worsen the conf lagrations.

It was the hottest August on record in California, and trees and brush were already abnormally dry and combustibl­e after northern and central California saw ex

[ ceptionall­y dry conditions last winter.

On Friday afternoon, two inmate firefighte­rs were injured fighting the Zogg fire in Shasta County.

The firefighte­rs were flown by helicopter from a steep area in the northern zone of the fire to a hospital, incident commander Sean Kavanaugh said Saturday at a news conference.

One was released Friday night, while the other remained hospitaliz­ed Saturday, Kavanaugh said. Cal Fire declined to provide more informatio­n about what happened.

Crews reported little growth on the 56,305-acre fire overnight but were bracing for west-northweste­rly winds to pick up later Saturday, said Christina Barkdull, public informatio­n officer for Cal Fire.

“We’ve put a lot of resources out there on certain divisions, just to be on the safe side,” she said.

People have returned to their homes in many areas at the southern edge of the fire over the last couple days, as containmen­t rose to 66%, she said.

“The north end of the fire, that’s kind of the priority right now because it’s burning in a lot of chaparral, the oak woodlands,” she said. “But we put in a lot of contingenc­y lines, where if something were to happen we’re able to box that fire in.”

The fire ignited early Sept. 27 near the community of Igo, about nine miles southwest of Redding, and spread rapidly, killing four people and destroying at least 179 structures.

About 140 miles south, in Northern California’s wine country, crews battling the Glass fire were breathing a sigh of relief Saturday morning after expected strong winds failed to materializ­e overnight.

Other than a small spot fire that was quickly extinguish­ed, the 62,360-acre fire’s footprint remained largely unchanged overnight, said Donna Sager, public informatio­n officer with Cal Fire.

Still, she said, hot, dry conditions are expected to remain a challenge.

Another challenge is that it has been too “socked in,” or smoky, to have aircraft drop water on the flames, she said, although there was hope for change Saturday.

Help also arrived Saturday from Oregon, where wetter conditions have permitted fire crews to get the upper hand on several blazes, freeing up resources to be sent elsewhere, she said.

Crews reported 15% containmen­t of the 63,450-acre Glass fire, which started Sept. 27 and quickly spread, gaining a foothold in a wedge of land north-northeast of Santa Rosa that hadn’t burned for 70 years. The blaze has destroyed at least 173 homes and 264 commercial buildings in Napa County and 120 homes and eight commercial buildings in Sonoma County, Sager said.

The largest fire in the state’s history continued to burn in Mendocino County, prompting new evacuation orders Saturday, nearly 50 days after it was sparked by lightning in mid-August.

The August Complex fire was 984,804 acres and still just 51% contained.

Fire officials have reported 100% containmen­t of two other large complexes of fire that were sparked by lightning in mid-August — the 396,624-acre SCU Lightning Complex fire in Santa Clara, Alameda and Stanislaus counties, and the 363,220-acre LNU Lightning Complex fire in Napa, Sonoma, Lake, Yolo and Solano counties.

Fire crews on Saturday reported progress against the Creek fire burning in the Sierra National Forest, which was 312,063 acres and 49% contained.

The North Complex fire, which killed 15 people after it raced into the towns of Berry Creek and Feather Falls, was 317,459 acres and 83% contained.

In the Los Angeles area, crews fighting the Bobcat fire in the Angeles National Forest said they were mostly focusing on mopping up and strengthen­ing containmen­t lines Saturday.

The fire had burned 114,963 acres, was 84% contained and had destroyed 87 homes and 83 other structures Saturday, though that number could rise as teams continue to perform damage assessment­s, officials said.

The fire was continuing to wreak havoc on the region’s air quality, with officials forecastin­g it would be unhealthy Sunday for those in parts of the San Gabriel and San Fernando valleys, as well as the San Gabriel Mountains, and unhealthy for sensitive people in many other places in Los Angeles County. The county Department of Public Health advised people with heart disease, asthma or other respirator­y conditions to limit outdoor activities.

 ?? Paul Duginski Los Angeles Times ??
Paul Duginski Los Angeles Times

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