Porterville Recorder

Wildfires barrel toward Northern lake towns

- By MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ and SUDHIN THANAWALA

LAKEPORT — A pair of wildfires that prompted evacuation orders for nearly 20,000 people barreled Monday toward small lake towns in Northern California, and authoritie­s faced questions about how quickly they warned residents about the largest and deadliest blaze burning in the state.

Ed Bledsoe told CBS News he did not receive any warning to evacuate his home in the city of Redding before the flames came through last week and killed his wife, Melody, and his great-grandchild­ren, 5-year-old James Roberts and 4-year-old Emily Roberts.

"If I'd have any kind of warning, I'd have never, ever left my family in that house," Bledsoe said.

Shasta County Sheriff Tom Bosenko told the network there's an investigat­ion into whether the Bledsoe home received a warning call or a knock on the door. The sheriff cited evidence that door-to-door notificati­ons were made in the area. Bosenko did not return a message from The Associated Press on Monday.

The dispute came as authoritie­s on Sunday ordered evacuation­s around twin fires in Mendocino and Lake counties, including from the 4,700-resident town of Lakeport, a popular destinatio­n for bass anglers and boaters on the shores of Clear Lake, about 120 miles north of San Francisco. The blazes have destroyed six homes and threaten 10,000 others. So far, the flames have blackened 87 square miles, with minimal containmen­t.

Those fires were among 17 burning across the state, where fire crews were stretched to the limit.

"We have experience­d fires the last four years, and so we're very aware of what can happen with fires and the damage they can cause," Lake County Sheriff Lt. Corey Paulich said.

Derick Hughes II did not heed the order and remained behind at his property in Nice, California, where he ran sprinklers on his roof and removed yard plants that could catch fire.

The 32-year-old Marine Corps veteran sent his wife and two daughters to safety along with three carloads of belongings. But he said he had too much at stake to leave himself. He bought his three-bedroom house last year using a loan from the Department of Veterans Affairs.

"This is everything I bled for, and I've worked really hard to get to where I am, and I'm just not willing to give it up so easily," he said over the phone. "Some people may think that's selfish of me, and I have insurance. But the way things go, I'd rather not start over."

Hughes said about five of his neighbors also disobeyed the evacuation text alert they got Sunday evening to protect their homes and keep looters out.

Farther north, police said five people were arrested on suspicion of entering areas evacuated due to the explosive wildfire around Redding.

That blaze killed six people and destroyed 723 homes. Authoritie­s were also investigat­ing at least 18 reports of missing people, though many of them may simply have failed to check in with friends or family, police said.

Fire officials were hopeful that they could make progress containing the blaze.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ ?? A firefighte­r with Cal Fire Mendocino Unit walks along a containmen­t line as a wildfire advances Monday, July 30, in Lakeport.
AP PHOTO BY MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ A firefighte­r with Cal Fire Mendocino Unit walks along a containmen­t line as a wildfire advances Monday, July 30, in Lakeport.

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