Los Angeles Times

Cooler weather helps tame La Tuna fire

La Tuna blaze is 30% contained, officials say, after ‘Mother Nature kicked in.’

- By Brittny Mejia

The Verdugo Mountains blaze, which destroyed four homes, shut the 210 Freeway and led to hundreds of evacuation­s, is now 30% contained.

Less than 24 hours after Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency in Los Angeles County, weather helped take the fight out of a more than 7,000-acre brush fire that officials said is the city’s largest in decades by acreage.

The La Tuna fire, which has raged in the Verdugo Mountains since Friday, is 30% contained, according to fire officials. There is “really no active fire left,” said Los Angeles Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas, although he noted that the wind could help kick the fire back up.

Temperatur­es Monday reached the mid-80s, with winds at 3 to 10 mph and a relative humidity of 40% to 45%. But that was a far cry from the heat wave temperatur­es that had helped the fire’s spread.

“Very favorable to the firefighte­rs making continued progress,” Terrazas said. “As long as the weather continues to cooperate, I am very confident and convinced we’ll be fine.”

The La Tuna fire destroyed four homes, shut down the 210 Freeway and led to evacuation­s in Burbank, Glendale and the Sunland-Tujunga area. At the peak of the fire, more than 700 residents were evacuated throughout the region.

The evacuation­s have since been lifted and the freeway reopened. The cause of the fire is not yet known, but officials said there is no evidence of arson.

The governor’s declaratio­n came Sunday, at the urging of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who said it would ensure that state and federal assistance was provided as quickly as possible. Garcetti described the fire as the biggest in the history of the city in terms of sheer acreage.

Fire officials repeated that statement on Monday.

“We’re confident back to 1961, the Bel-Air fire, that this is the largest fire by acreage in the city of Los Angeles,” Terrazas said.

Relief from the heat wave came for firefighte­rs on Sunday, when temperatur­es dipped a bit and rain fell in some burn areas as monsoonal moisture from Tropical Storm Lidia moved into the region.

“The moisture that damped down the fire yesterday was from Lidia,” said Jet Propulsion Laboratory climatolog­ist Bill Patzert. “That was a gift from ... Lidia.”

Because of concern over future rain and mudslides, bulldozers will be used to clear out basins, which could get clogged and lead to mud and water flowing into communitie­s, Terrazas said.

Burbank police said that they would continue to monitor the situation, but that their police and fire department­s were initiating a demobiliza­tion plan.

“Mother Nature kicked in overnight,” said Sgt. Derek Green, a spokesman with the Burbank Police Department. “We received some rain, some very welcomed rain.”

Firefighte­rs continued battling a 3,800-acre brush fire in Riverside County that forced more than 400 people to evacuate their homes.

The Palmer fire broke out about 1:30 p.m. Saturday west of Beaumont and rapidly spread by nightfall. The blaze is believed to have been ignited by fireworks, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

As of Monday, the fire was 50% contained. Evacuation orders and road closures were lifted Sunday afternoon.

Patzert said September is “the heat wave month” so the risk of other fires will persist as brush, grasses and other vegetation continue to become dry and desiccated.

“The simple formula is that fire equals fuel, plus ignition, plus meteorolog­y,” Patzert said Monday.

After above-average rainfall last winter through February, March turned dry, he said.

“But the rainfall we did have really encouraged the brush and especially the grasses … so we were primed for fires all over the Southland. And we’re definitely not done,” Patzert said. “The fire season is the Santa Ana winds season and historical­ly that’s October, with November being the peak of the old fire season.”

 ?? Ringo H.W. Chiu Associated Press ?? CRAIG BOLLESON hugs a friend among the ruins of his home in the SunlandTuj­unga area of Los Angeles. The cause of the wildfire is not yet known.
Ringo H.W. Chiu Associated Press CRAIG BOLLESON hugs a friend among the ruins of his home in the SunlandTuj­unga area of Los Angeles. The cause of the wildfire is not yet known.
 ?? Michael Owen Baker For The Times ?? THE LA TUNA fire, which has raged since Friday, is considered the largest blaze by acreage in L.A.’s history. Above, Luis Ramirez rides past charred hills in Burbank.
Michael Owen Baker For The Times THE LA TUNA fire, which has raged since Friday, is considered the largest blaze by acreage in L.A.’s history. Above, Luis Ramirez rides past charred hills in Burbank.
 ?? Ringo H.W. Chiu Associated Press ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS douse hot spots on a hillside in the Sunland-Tujunga area. The fire destroyed four homes, shut down the 210 Freeway and forced evacuation­s.
Ringo H.W. Chiu Associated Press FIREFIGHTE­RS douse hot spots on a hillside in the Sunland-Tujunga area. The fire destroyed four homes, shut down the 210 Freeway and forced evacuation­s.

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