Los Angeles Times

Paradise faced two bad options

Officials hoped to avoid a repeat of previous gridlock, but staggered evacuation moved too slowly.

- By Joseph Serna, Paige St. John and Rong-Gong Lin II

PARADISE, Calif. — When the Camp fire barreled toward this Sierra foothill town last Thursday morning, officials had a crucial choice to make right away: How much of Paradise should be evacuated?

The decision was complicate­d by history and topography. Paradise sits on a hilltop and is hemmed in by canyons, with only four narrow winding routes to flee to safety. During its last major fire in 2008, authoritie­s evacuated so many people that roads became dangerousl­y clogged.

So this time, they decided not to immediatel­y undergo a full-scale evacuation, hoping to get residents out of neighborho­ods closest to the fires first before the roads became gridlocked.

But it soon became clear that the fire was moving too fast for that plan, and that the whole town was in jeopardy. A full-scale evacuation order was issued at 9:17 a.m., but by then the fire was already consuming the town.

At least 56 people were killed — most of them in their homes, some trying to flee in their cars and others outside, desperatel­y seeking shelter from the flames. More than 10,000 structures were lost in what is by far the worst wildfire in California history.

It’s unclear how much a different evacuation strategy would have changed the outcome of the fire, which was fueled by intense wind gusts of up to 52 mph and record dry vegetation in an area notoriousl­y vulnerable to fires and wind-blown embers.

But the level of destructio­n and death is sure to make Paradise a grim lesson for agencies trying to improve emergency alerts and evacuation­s from fires as well as floods, mudslides and other natural disasters.

The death toll from natural disasters in California in the last year has been enormous, with nearly 40 killed in the wine country and Mendocino County fires and more than 20 in the Montecito mudslides. Officials acknowledg­ed shortcomin­gs in the efforts to get people out of harm’s way.

In the chaos of the Paradise fire, many residents said, they never got warnings by phone from authoritie­s to leave. Some said they got warnings from police driving through their streets using loudspeake­rs. Others got texts from neighbors. But few said they got official text alerts or phone calls from the government.

The fire was first reported near the community of Pulga — about seven miles from Paradise — about 6:30 a.m. By 7:35 a.m., it had reached the nearby hamlet of Concow.

The first evacuation order for Paradise came at 8 a.m., a minute after the first flames were spotted in town. The order was limited to the eastern side of Paradise. The hope was to get the residents closest to fire out immediatel­y, with the rest of the town to follow if needed.

But the fire was simply moving too fast.

“The fire had already outrun us,” said John Messina, California Department of Fire and Forestry Protection battalion chief for Butte County.

The evacuation orders were sent using a phone system called CodeRed, which covers all landlines as well as cellphone numbers voluntaril­y submitted by residents. But the system doesn’t cover all phones in the town. “In the town of Paradise, I think we’d be lucky to say 25% or 30%” of phone lines are in the system — and that’s after local officials urge residents to sign up, said Jim Broshears, who directs Paradise’s emergency operations center.

Also, the system can reach only so many phones per hour. “I can’t give you the raw numbers, but there’s a capacity per hour of calls. So CodeRed can’t [make] 12,000 calls at once. It’s really fast, but not this fast,” Broshears said.

These types of systems have been criticized because they reach so few people. Instead, some safety experts have advocated using the federal government’s Wireless Emergency Alert system, which sends Amber Alert-style warnings to cellphones within a certain geographic­al area. But the system was not used during several California disasters, including the wine country fires and the heavy flooding that hit San Jose.

James Gore, chairman of the Sonoma County Board of Supervisor­s, said government is failing when officials don’t do a good job of communicat­ing an incoming hazard.

“If people are already getting word on Facebook, and there’s nothing coming out of your government, then you’ve failed,” said Gore, whose county has begun to buy fire cameras that can sense the movement of blazes by heat and is seeking to purchase air sirens for parts of the county without cell coverage. “If you’re more worried about the crisis you could cause than the crisis that is upon you, then you have failed.”

In Paradise, Broshears

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