Los Angeles Times

‘This is the new abnormal’

Air attack saves homes near Malibu Canyon, but winds pose a threat

- By Sarah Parvini, Benjamin Oreskes, James Queally, Alene Tchekmedyi­an and Jack Dolan

Los Angeles County fire engineer Scott Pishe stood guard outside several multimilli­on-dollar homes Sunday as air tankers and helicopter­s bombarded the fire-ravaged slopes of nearby Malibu Canyon with fire retardant and water.

Earlier in the day, flames threatened to make a run into a chute by the canyon, but the aggressive air attack kept the fire there at bay.

“If it had gotten into that chute, we would’ve been in trouble,” Pishe said from the southeaste­rn flank of the blaze, which had claimed two lives and forced 250,000 people from Malibu to Thousand Oaks to f lee their homes. “All of that is because of the birds. The aircraft assault has been nonstop.”

While flames crept perilously close to

homes Sunday, a squadron of 22 helicopter­s took advantage of a lull in winds to mount a vigorous aerial attack on the deadly Woolsey fire, saving homes and keeping flare-ups near Bell Canyon and Pacific Coast Highway within the fire’s 85,550acre footprint. By Sunday night, containmen­t jumped to 15%.

“Today was a better day,” Los Angeles County Fire Chief Daryl Osby told reporters late Sunday afternoon. “To date, as I stand here at this moment, it’s encouragin­g that none of the flare-ups exceeded the containmen­t lines. This morning we were truly concerned about that.”

Despite Sunday’s gains, officials still fear that rogue embers could fly across containmen­t lines. Officials warned that winds were expected to pick up over the next several days — forecaster­s predict gusts of 40 mph or stronger — and urged residents who were sheltering in place to evacuate because the fire could spread rapidly and erraticall­y.

“Maybe 10 or 20 years ago you stayed in your homes when there was a fire, and you were able to protect them,” Ventura County Fire Chief Mark Lorenzen said. “Things are not the way they were 10 years ago.”

The fire has destroyed at least 177 buildings, and about 57,000 structures are still threatened. But footage from television helicopter­s seemed to show much more widespread property damage, and Osby acknowledg­ed the number of structures lost will increase once damage-assessment teams can better survey the area.

Wildfires across California have scorched nearly 200,000 acres and killed at least 31 people in recent days, according to fire officials. The Camp fire in Butte County has left at least 29 people dead and all but destroyed the city of Paradise.

With destructiv­e fires burning in both the northern and southern parts of the state, Gov. Jerry Brown requested a presidenti­al disaster declaratio­n early Sunday. Crews have been pulled into the fire fight from several states, including Washington, Montana, Idaho and Utah.

“This is not the new normal; this is the new abnormal,” Brown said Sunday. “And this new abnormal will continue certainly in the next 10 to 15 to 20 years. Unfortunat­ely, the best science is telling us that dryness, warmth, drought, all those things, they’re going to intensify. We have a real challenge here threatenin­g our whole way of life, so we’ve got to pull together.”

In Southern California,

not everyone heeded orders to flee.

On Dapplegray Road in Bell Canyon, Greg and Alma Cwik instead used any tools they could find to fight flames on their own. When power was knocked out, they managed with LED lights. They used hoses and sprinklers, and when the water was shut off, they filled buckets with pool water to douse the flames.

“Firefighte­rs were here, but they were very few,” Alma Cwik, 63, said. “They were here, but when the fire went to Malibu and Hidden Hills, they went there.”

At one point Friday, she said, the canyon beneath their deck caught fire. She and her husband began fighting the flames — in one photo she took of herself, she is holding a hose while a fire burns along the hill.

“They were very shorthande­d Friday,” she said.

“Seeing neighbors’ houses going up is crazy,” Greg Cwik said from his living room. “You couldn’t even see the sun. It was like night almost.”

Late Sunday, about 300 people who fled their homes packed an auditorium at Taft High School in Woodland Hills, where they gave a prolonged standing ovation for the firefighte­rs and police officers battling to save their homes.

But the weariness was obvious. After several days, almost everyone was tired of staying in hotels, bunking in tight quarters with relatives or simply sleeping in their cars wherever they could find a safe place to park.

A groan went up about 40 minutes into the meeting when fire officials announced there was now a mandatory evacuation for the entire city of Calabasas.

Frankie Palmer of Malibu had to flee her Point Dume home with her family and their two dogs, but her house is safe and she’s been able to stay, relatively comfortabl­y, with nearby family.

“We’re so fortunate that we’re safe and we don’t have to worry about hotel bills,” Palmer said. “I know not everyone has been so lucky.”

Bell Canyon resident Steve Kent found out his home was burning Friday afternoon — in real-time.

“This is not good,” a neighbor texted him. “The fire department is gone, and the smoke coming out of the chimney is darker and thicker.”

Soon after, his phone buzzed again.

“Your house is on fire,” the neighbor said, attaching a photo of flames bursting through the roof.

“The emotions we go through are horrendous,” Kent, 64, said Sunday. “From ‘I don’t have any socks; I don’t have any shirts,’ to, ‘We don’t have all of the pictures and videos and all those things that can’t be replaced.’ And so it’s overwhelmi­ng.”

He and his wife put everything they were able to grab before they left, such as their passports and birth certificat­es, into two suitcases. But neither of them were full.

“We’re just trying to figure out putting our lives together,” he said. “I’ve never not had anything.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? AN AIRCRAFT drops retardant over the Woolsey fire in the Santa Monica Mountains. Crews made gains Sunday amid a lull in winds.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times AN AIRCRAFT drops retardant over the Woolsey fire in the Santa Monica Mountains. Crews made gains Sunday amid a lull in winds.
 ??  ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS WATCH as a plume of smoke rises near West Hills on the western edge of the San Fernando Valley on Sunday, which L.A. County Fire Chief Daryl Osby call led “a better day” for the fire fight. By the day’s end, containmen­t of the 85,550-acre Woolsey fire jumped to 15%.
FIREFIGHTE­RS WATCH as a plume of smoke rises near West Hills on the western edge of the San Fernando Valley on Sunday, which L.A. County Fire Chief Daryl Osby call led “a better day” for the fire fight. By the day’s end, containmen­t of the 85,550-acre Woolsey fire jumped to 15%.
 ?? Kent Nishimura ?? KEITH CLARK, left, and his son Shane search the ruins of Shane’s Bell Canyon home. The Woolsey fire destroyed at least 177 buildings.
Kent Nishimura KEITH CLARK, left, and his son Shane search the ruins of Shane’s Bell Canyon home. The Woolsey fire destroyed at least 177 buildings.
 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ??
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times
 ?? Francine Orr ?? GARET ANZALONE surveys his grandmothe­r’s Westlake Village property. Fire officials expect the number of structures lost to go up as teams assess damage.
Francine Orr GARET ANZALONE surveys his grandmothe­r’s Westlake Village property. Fire officials expect the number of structures lost to go up as teams assess damage.

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