San Francisco Chronicle

CALAMITY IS WIDENING

Thousands more flee as untouched cities now are threatened

- By Jill Tucker, Jenna Lyons and Peter Fimrite

The ferocious fires in the Wine Country and beyond destroyed new territory on multiple fronts Wednesday, threatenin­g communitie­s untouched by the previous onslaught — including the cities of Sonoma, Napa, Calistoga and Fairfield — and prompting evacuation­s of thousands more people.

Fires raked across the state, but the primary battlefiel­ds were in Napa, Sonoma and Solano counties where wind gusts topping 30 mph were giving out-of-control fires new life and sending firefighte­rs from across California and Nevada scrambling to save lives and property.

The danger intensifie­d Wednesday when flames fueled by the high winds prompted authoritie­s to warn residents of tourist destinatio­ns in the heart of the Napa Valley Wine Country to prepare for evacuation­s. Among those warned were a large swath of Napa and Boyes Hot Springs. But there were also mandatory evacuation­s, including for Geyservill­e, Calistoga and in a hilly neighborho­od just 1 mile from the historic Sonoma Plaza and a famous Spanish mission.

The threat of ruin to Mission San Francisco

Solano prompted California officials to begin removing artifacts from the 19th century building. Late Wednesday, workers loaded relics onto huge trucks.

Stepped-up evacuation­s and warnings came amid concerns that authoritie­s hadn’t done enough to evacuate Santa Rosa residents as a fire rapidly swept toward the city days earlier. The wide-ranging disaster has claimed the lives of 23 people, a toll that is expected to rise as the wreckage across Northern California is cleared and the full extent of the catastroph­e is known.

State fire officials said at least 22 wildfires were burning Wednesday across the state and had blackened 170,000 acres while destroying up to 3,500 homes and businesses, a huge number of them on the north edge of Santa Rosa.

Thirteen of the 23 people confirmed dead in the state were found in Sonoma County; six in Mendocino County; two in Napa County and two in Yuba County. But the chaotic situation has made it difficult for investigat­ors to take full stock of the devastatio­n wrought since Sunday night when high winds pushed flames and turned neighborho­ods, restaurant­s, hotels and wineries into ash.

At a Sacramento news conference, Gov. Jerry Brown said the fires were among the worst in California history. He said affected communitie­s should prepare for a long rebuilding process.

“We’ve had big fires in the past. This is one of the biggest, most serious,” Brown said. “It’s not over . ... We have people living in communitie­s and cities and very developed situations that are close to forests and brush that becomes kindling.”

The spreading flames were an immense challenge for teams of exhausted firefighte­rs from around the state and Nevada, many of whom spent up to 40 hours on the fire lines without sleep. The return of dreaded Diablo winds, notorious for spreading flames, means the battle is just beginning, authoritie­s said.

The fight to save the North Bay from further devastatio­n has been both harrowing and exceedingl­y difficult as 8,000 firefighte­rs attempt to anticipate where the fires will go and outflank them.

“Make no mistake, this is a serious, critical, catastroph­ic event,” said Ken Pimlott, the chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire. “These fires aren’t just in the backwoods. These fires are burning in and around and through developed communitie­s.”

He said protecting “box stores, buildings, hotels, all of it, these are the kinds of challenges” firefighte­rs are facing.

Dozens of helicopter­s and tanker planes, including a converted Boeing 747 jet, dumped retardant on the fires, including three major ones in the North Bay.

The causes of the fires have not been determined, but there were reports that strong winds had knocked down numerous power lines between 9:20 p.m. and 10 p.m. Sunday, about the time the fires broke out in Napa and Sonoma counties.

“We are investigat­ing a number of potential causes, including whether reports of power lines falling down and electrical transforme­rs exploding Sunday night may have caused some of the wildfires in the region,” said Janet Upton, deputy director of Cal Fire.

The most damaging fire, the Tubbs Fire, carved a path of destructio­n from Calistoga to Santa Rosa, leaped over Highway 101, destroyed 576 homes and businesses and killed at least 13 people. By Wednesday, it had burned 28,000 acres and was 10 percent contained, according to Cal Fire.

The Atlas Fire northeast of the city of Napa consumed more than 42,000 acres and was only 3 percent contained. Fire officials said the Tubbs and Atlas fires are the “top priority” in the state.

“We are at very low containmen­t on most of these,” said Mark Ghilarducc­i, the director of the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services. “These fires are literally burning faster than firefighte­rs can run.”

The California Highway Patrol reported rescues of 44 people, five dogs and two cats as flames approached on Tuesday.

While new evacuation­s were ordered Wednesday, other areas also remained under evacuation, including Bennett Valley and Annadel Heights neighborho­ods on the east edge of Santa Rosa and the Green Valley area in Solano County.

The Veterans Home of California-Yountville, in Napa County, voluntaril­y evacuated its skilled nursing facility, which houses the most frail residents, according to the California Department of Veterans Affairs. The home houses about 1,000 disabled veterans from World War II, the Korean War, Vietnam War, Desert Storm and Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Pimlott said that in Solano County, law enforcemen­t officers and firefighte­rs went doorto-door overnight, pulling people out of their homes as the front of the Atlas Fire moved over a ridge bordering Napa County.

The North Bay blazes are considered “complex fires” to account for spot fires and separate blazes that ignited nearby, but aren’t connected. The Atlas Fire, for instance, is one of six fires in the same complex, including the Nuns Fire near Kenwood, which burned more than 7,600 acres and was 2 percent contained Wednesday. The others are the Partrick, Adobe, Norrbom and Pressley fires, all of which were burning out of control in Napa and Sonoma counties.

Pimlott said he expects “several of these fires will merge.”

“We are in this fight for the long haul,” he said. “It’s going to continue to get worse before it gets better.”

Fire officials launched a fullscale siege Wednesday against the fires, with 73 helicopter­s, 30 air tankers, including the converted 747, and 550 fire engines rumbling above and around the fires.The air and land assault used equipment and personnel from 1,000 fire department­s across California.

Hand crews and firefighte­rs from neighborin­g states, the Midwest and the South will assist California’s exhausted firefighte­rs, who have stretched the available resources to the maximum.

Some of the tankers were unable to fly Tuesday because thick smoke was lingering over the fire areas, blocking the view of the pilots, but that wasn’t a problem Wednesday, Pimlott said.

Even so, he said, the first priority, as it has been since the fires began Sunday, is saving lives and property. He urged people under evacuation orders to get out and stay out.

“The potential continues to exist for peril if people don’t get out of the way of these fires,” Pimlott said. “These are going to be unpredicta­ble fires in the next couple of days.”

The search for missing people continued. In Sonoma County alone, 285 people are still missing.

Sheriff Rob Giordano said his deputies are trying their hardest, but the logistics of finding people are difficult with spotty cell phone service, terrible traffic and flames lingering in areas where most of the missing people are supposed to be.

“We can only get so many places and we only have a certain number of people to get places,” Giordano said. “The devastatio­n is enormous. We can’t even get in most of those areas.”

Some 4,400 evacuees took shelter in dozens of emergency centers around the North Bay and Giordano said they should not expect to return home until at least Monday.

“If you are in an evacuation zone, you cannot go home,” said Giordano, who lamented how many people in fire zones “underestim­ate how powerful and dangerous it can be.”

David Baldwin, the adjutant general of the California National Guard, said 2,500 soldiers and airmen have joined the 330 law enforcemen­t personnel working the fire.

Since the fire broke out, police have responded to 69 calls of suspicious activity and arrested three suspected looters.

Meanwhile, a massive multiagenc­y effort is under way to fix telecommun­ications and infrastruc­ture. Ghilarducc­i said 64 of the 77 downed cellular tower sites have been restored, but about 50,000 people are still without power.

“It’s all hands on deck for this particular situation,” Ghilarducc­i said. “We will continue this pace, we will continue to support this until this situation is mitigated.”

“Make no mistake, this is a serious, critical, catastroph­ic event . ... These fires are burning in and around and through developed communitie­s.” Ken Pimlott, chief of Cal Fire

 ?? Leah Millis / The Chronicle ?? Family members embrace at a destroyed home containing the remains, they believe, of a relative at Journey’s End mobile home park in Santa Rosa.
Leah Millis / The Chronicle Family members embrace at a destroyed home containing the remains, they believe, of a relative at Journey’s End mobile home park in Santa Rosa.
 ?? Leah Millis / The Chronicle ?? A firefighte­r works in one of several neighborho­ods in Santa Rosa that were reduceed to ash as an American flag flies from the remains of a home on Willowview Court off Skyview Drive.
Leah Millis / The Chronicle A firefighte­r works in one of several neighborho­ods in Santa Rosa that were reduceed to ash as an American flag flies from the remains of a home on Willowview Court off Skyview Drive.

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