Marin Independent Journal

North Bay residents facing fire fatigue

- ByOlga R. Rodriguez and Terry Chea

Will Abrams and his family packed their pickup truck with laptops, clothes, sleeping bags and a tent and quickly left their rental home in the wine country after seeing flames on a hill about a quarter-mile away Monday morning. It was their third hurried fire evacuation in as many years.

In 2017, Abrams woke up to find their Santa Rosa home on fire and cleared burning branches from the driveway so he could get his wife, 12-year- old son and 9-year- old daughter to safety. Their home was destroyed. Then last year, the family evacuated as another wildfire bore down on Sonoma County.

“This time we hurried up and packed up the car, and we were in gridlock traffic on (Highway) 12 while the f lames were approachin­g from behind,” Abrams said Tuesday. He and his wife tried to entertain the kids by making conversati­on so they wouldn’t panic.

“It was just obviously traumatic on a personal level, but also just that so little has changed since the fires of 2017 in terms of preparedne­ss and prevention.”

They have been told this home is still standing. But with the Glass Fire still completely uncontaine­d, the family is staying in Berkeley until they are allowed to return.

“I’m trying to prepare my kids and let them know that climate change is part of life and they’re going to have to deal with it as they get older and also trying to provide them a sense of safety and security. It’s not easy. But we should not accept this is theway (it) is going to be,” he said.

The Abrams family is among thousands of weary wine country residents confrontin­g another devastatin­g wildfire. The Glass Fire, which started Sunday, has scorched more than 66 squaremile­s and destroyed about 95 structures.

It’s the fourth major fire there in three years and comes ahead of the third anniversar­y of a 2017 wildfire that killed 22 people. Three fires, driven by gusty winds and high temperatur­es, merged into one on Sunday, tearing into vineyards and mountain areas, including part of the city of Santa Rosa. About 70,000 people were under evacuation orders, including the entire 5,000-plus population of Calistoga.

Numerous studies have linked bigger wildfires in America to climate change fromthe burning of coal, oil and gas. Scientists say climate change has made California much drier, meaning trees and other plants are more flammable.

The Glass Fire spread rapidly and is now burning through land that was saved fromthe other recent wine country fires, Cal Fire Assistant Chief Billy See said. Some of the land has not burned for a century, while crews are now using old containmen­t lines to fight the current fire, relieved slightly by easing winds.

It’s one of nearly 30 wildfires burning around California. The National Weather Service warned that hot, dry conditions with strong Santa Ana winds could continue posing a fire danger in Southern California through Tuesday afternoon. The state has already seen more than 8,100 wildfires that have killed 29 people, scorched 5,780 squaremile­s and destroyed more than 7,000 buildings.

Patrick Ryan, who lives just outside Santa Rosa, stayed up the whole night trying to fight the flames and save his house, which survived.

“Surreal, let me just put it that way. It brings everything about that night in 2017 right back again,” Ryan said.

Mike Christians­on and his wife, Mluz Torres, who were at an evacuation center Tuesday, had watched the fire engulf their Napa County home.

“It was within five minutes, the entire side of the hill was on fire. All trees, all burning, all roaring like a jet,” he said. “And at that moment, we realized that it was time to go. So we grabbed a few things, jumped in the car.”

Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick acknowledg­ed “some significan­t fire fatigue” in the community during a news conference Tuesday.

“Many people are feeling the effects, many people are evacuating, and evacuated multiple times, and I just want everyone to know that we continue to support you,” Essick said.

The blaze tore through many iconic wineries in Napa and Sonoma counties and the five-starred Meadowood Resort, home to a three-Michelin-starred restaurant.

 ?? JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Destructio­n fromthe Glass Fire is seen in the parking lot of the DeerParkCo­mmunityHal­l just north ofSt. Helena on Tuesday.
JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Destructio­n fromthe Glass Fire is seen in the parking lot of the DeerParkCo­mmunityHal­l just north ofSt. Helena on Tuesday.
 ?? JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The Glass Fire, which started Sunday, has scorched more than 66square miles and destroyed about 95structur­es.
JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The Glass Fire, which started Sunday, has scorched more than 66square miles and destroyed about 95structur­es.

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