Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Crews face another critical day battling largest U.S. fire

- Post-Gazette wire services

QUINCY, Calif. — More than a month after it ignited neara Pacific Gas and Electric Co. power station in Feather River Canyon, the relentless Dixie fire shows no signs of slowing down as it continues to threaten homes and strain fire fighting resources.

The fire had burned 540,581 acres, destroyed at least 738 residence sand commercial properties and forced nearly 29,000 people from their homes as of Saturday morning, authoritie­s said. Nearly 15,000 structures remained threatened.

The fire made a number of significan­t runs Friday, sending up large columns of ash and smoke that in at least one case generated its own lightning, officials said. Its ferocity has stunned even veteran firefighte­rs, adding an element of unpredicta­bility that makes it difficult to determine when they’ll be able toget the upper hand.

“‘Typical’ is a challengin­g word for us,” said Dan McKeague, public informatio­n officer with the U.S. Forest Service, noting the massive fire is unusual in both its sheer size and its erratic behavior. “When you have the combinatio­n of this active a fire over this big of a landscape, there’s not much typical about it.”

The fire, which was 31% contained, prompted new evacuation orders for Genesee Valley on Friday night as thundersto­rms swept through, causing erratic outflowwin­ds that increased fire activity,Mr. McKeague said.

“You can have really sudden changes in terms of the winddirect­ion when we have those outflow drafts,” he said. “If you picture a faucet where water is coming down and then when it hits the sink it spreads out in all directions, that’s what that air is doing as those pressure systems interact.”

Fire officials were eying Saturday’s conditions nervously, as a smoke inversion that had put a cap on the fire earlier in the week had cleared out, he said.

“That puts more sun on the fire, and potentiall­y more air movement,” he said. “That’s not a good thing in termsof fire behavior.”

Meanwhile, a fast-moving fire broke out Saturday afternoon east of Salt Lake City, shutting down Interstate 80 and prompting the evacuation of Summit Park, a mountain community of 6,600 people. Fire officials said the blaze was burning about 3 square miles and threatenin­g thousands of homes and powerlines.

In southeaste­rn Montana, firefighte­rs were gaining ground on a pair of fires that chewed through vast rangelands and at one point threatened the Northern Cheyenne IndianRese­rvation.

Firefighte­rs on the western flank of the Dixie fire saw a lot of activity along Highway 36 between Chester and Westwood, where crews put in50 to 100 feet of contingenc­y line, said Edwin Zuniga, public informatio­n officer with the California Department of Forestryan­d Fire Protection.

“A lot of structure protection resources are being assigned to that specific area to protect the peninsula on Lake Almanor, the cabins alongthat stretch of Highway 36 and the community of Westwood,”he said.

The weather was continuing to pose a challenge, with hotter and drier conditions forecast for the next couple of days,he said.

Temperatur­es in the area of were expected to reach anywhere from the upper 80s to just shy of 100, depending on the smoke cover, said Scott Rowe, meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Servicein Sacramento.

The Dixie fire ignited July 13 near the spot where a tree fell into a PG&E power line. The utility has said it took a worker about 10 hours to reach the remote site and observefla­mes.

Although the cause of the fire remains under review, prosecutor­s in at least two counties are investigat­ing PG&E for potential criminal charges, saying it should have been aware of the high risk of fire in the canyon. It is the same canyon where PG&E equipment ignited the 2018 Camp fire, for which the utility pleaded guilty to 84 counts of manslaught­er after the town of Paradise was decimated.PG&E had planned to bury the power line that might have started the Dixie fire as part of a safety campaign announced in the wake of the Camp fire, but work on theproject hadn’t yet begun.

 ?? Eugene Garcia/Associated Press ?? A red tractor is left behind as a home burns Friday as part of the Dixie Fire outside of Taylorsvil­le in Plumas County, Calif.
Eugene Garcia/Associated Press A red tractor is left behind as a home burns Friday as part of the Dixie Fire outside of Taylorsvil­le in Plumas County, Calif.

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