Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wildfire explodes to third largest in California history

No deaths or injuries, but 10,000 homes at risk

- Daisy Nguyen and Noah Berger

GREENVILLE, Calif. – A Northern California wildfire that’s now the thirdlarge­st in state history had burned for weeks, mostly in remote wildland areas with few people, before it roared through the little mountain community of Greenville, driven by shifting winds and bone-dry vegetation.

Eva Gorman has called the town home for 17 years and said it was love at first sight when she and her husband bought a house.

“We walked up to the front of the house and said. ‘Oh wow, this is it,’ ” she said, a place where her grandmothe­r’s dining room chairs and her aunt’s bed from Italy fit just right. “You know when you run across something that fits like an old shoe or glove?”

Now the town is in ashes after hot, dry, gusty weather drove the fire through the Gold Rush-era Sierra Nevada community of about 1,000. The blaze incinerate­d much of the downtown that included wooden buildings more than a century old.

The winds were expected to calm and change direction heading into the weekend, but that good news came too late for Gorman. She was told that her home burned down, but is waiting until she can see it with her own eyes to believe it’s gone.

Before fleeing Greenville, Gorman said she managed to grab some photos off the wall, her favorite jewelry and important documents. She is coming to terms with the reality that much of what was left behind may be irreplacea­ble.

“There is a photo I keep visualizin­g in my mind of my son when he was 2; he’s 37,” she said. “And you think ‘It’s OK, I have the negatives.’ And then you think. ‘Oh. No. I don’t have the negatives.’ ”

The fire was still raging on Friday after growing overnight by 110 square miles, greater than the size of New York City.

“This is going to be a long firefight,” Capt. Mitch Matlow, spokespers­on of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said.

The fire remained at 35% contained Friday morning and now spans an area of 676 square miles. No injuries or deaths were reported, but the fire continued to threaten more than 10,000 homes.

Officials have not assessed the number of destroyed buildings, but Plumas County Sheriff Todd Johns estimated on Thursday that “well over” 100 homes burned in and near the town. “My heart is crushed by what has occurred there,” said Johns, a lifelong Greenville resident.

The 3-week-old Dixie Fire was one of 100 active, large fires burning in 14 states, most in the West where historic drought has left lands parched and ripe for ignition.

The fire’s cause was under investigat­ion, but the Pacific Gas & Electric utility has said it may have been sparked when a tree fell on one of the utility’s power lines.

On Thursday, the weather and towering smoke clouds produced by the fire’s intense, erratic winds kept firefighters struggling to put firefighters at shifting hot spots.

“We’re seeing truly frightenin­g fire behavior,” said Chris Carlton, supervisor for Plumas National Forest. “We really are in uncharted territory.”

Heat waves and historic drought tied to climate change have made wildfires harder to fight in the American West. Scientists say climate change has made the region much warmer and drier in the past 30 years and will continue to make weather more extreme and wildfires more frequent and destructiv­e.

The blaze hit Greenville from two angles, and firefighters already were in the town trying to save it, but first they had to risk their lives to save people who had refused to evacuate by loading people into cars to get them out, fire officials said.

“We have firefighters that are getting guns pulled out on them, because people don’t want to evacuate,” said Jake Cagle, an incident management operations section chief.

 ?? NOAH BERGER/AP ?? Fire consumes a pickup truck on Highway 89 south of Greenville, Calif., in Plumas County on Thursday.
NOAH BERGER/AP Fire consumes a pickup truck on Highway 89 south of Greenville, Calif., in Plumas County on Thursday.

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