Los Angeles Times

Riverbed f ire driven by winds

Blaze engulfs 175 acres of dry brush in Norco and forces residents nearby to evacuate.

- By Hannah Fry and Alene Tchekmedyi­an

The blaze burns 175 acres in Norco and forces many to f lee.

A brush fire that broke out in the Santa Ana River bottom in Norco on Tuesday morning has stopped growing after tearing through 175 acres and temporaril­y forcing nearby residents to evacuate.

The blaze, dubbed the Mann fire, was reported at 9:51 a.m. along a section of riverbed near California Avenue and Grulla Court. The fire, which was initially reported to be about 10 acres, quickly chewed through heavy, dry brush in the area and swelled to 100 acres in less than two hours, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

It stopped growing by midafterno­on, and authoritie­s lifted evacuation orders west of California Avenue and north of 8th Street.

As of 6:45 p.m., residents north of North Drive and east of California Avenue remained under an evacuation warning.

Two people suffered injuries that were not lifethreat­ening. Five properties sustained minor damage to fencing and outbuildin­gs, authoritie­s said.

The homes sit in a city known for its equestrian trails and properties, officials said.

Evacuation centers were set up at Corona High School and Corona Jurupa Valley High School. Residents with large animals were told to go to the George Ingalls Equestrian Event Center.

Students from nearby Riverview Elementary School were evacuated from the campus shortly after noon and were taken by bus to Norco High School, school officials wrote in a message to parents.

The Jurupa Unified School District said several of its schools were put on an “inclement weather schedule” because of smoke from the fire.

More than 200 firefighte­rs responded to battle the blaze amid winds gusting up to 25 mph. The cause of the fire has not been determined.

Television images showed firefighte­rs spraying down trees and homes near the fire as strong winds whipped through the area. Smoke was visible across Riverside County.

A high-wind warning, which expired at noon, was in effect for the Norco area at the time the fire broke out. Northeast winds were gusting between 15 and 25 mph in the area shortly after noon as temperatur­es climbed to the high 70s.

“The winds are starting to die down,” said Jimmy Taeger, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in San Diego. “Hopefully, this means things will be getting better soon for firefighte­rs.”

Large swaths of California are facing the driest combined January and February on record, and many areas of the state already have relatively dry vegetation.

Officials with the weather service in Los Angeles wrote on Twitter that the fire is “an indication of how dry it is getting in SoCal without significan­t rainfall in the past two months.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles TImes ?? A HELICOPTER makes water drops over a brush fire that broke out in the Santa Ana River bottom in Norco. Two people suffered non-life-threatenin­g injuries and some properties sustained damage, authoritie­s said.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles TImes A HELICOPTER makes water drops over a brush fire that broke out in the Santa Ana River bottom in Norco. Two people suffered non-life-threatenin­g injuries and some properties sustained damage, authoritie­s said.
 ?? Paul Duginski ??
Paul Duginski

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