Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Calmer winds help Calif. firefighte­rs in coastal areas

- By Chris Weber Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Thousands of firefighte­rs tried Sunday to shield coastal communitie­s from one of the biggest wildfires in California history while a funeral procession rolled past burn-scarred hillsides in honor of one of their colleagues who was killed battling the flames.

Crews cleared brush and dug containmen­t lines above hillside neighborho­ods in Santa Barbara County, taking advantage of slightly calmer winds a day after gusts fanned a flare-up that prompted more evacuation­s.

“Everything's holding really well,” fire informatio­n officer Lisa Cox said. “Thousands of homes have been saved.”

While gusts had eased somewhat, even lower intensity winds were still dangerous, she warned. The fire northwest of Los Angeles was 40 percent contained.

Television news footage showed at least one structure burned on property in the wealthy enclave of Montecito, and authoritie­s said damage assessment­s could take days.

Mourners stood on freeway overpasses to pay respects to firefighte­r Cory Iverson, 32, who died Thursday of burns and smoke inhalation. His funeral procession to ended at a funeral home in San Diego, where he was based with a state fire engine strike team. He is survived by his pregnant wife and a 2-year-old daughter.

The blaze is also blamed for the death of a 70-yearold woman who died in a car crash on an evacuation route.

The fire that started nearly two weeks ago has burned more than 1,000 structures, including at least 750 homes. Some 18,000 more homes were still threatened.

Some evacuation orders were lifted to the east in Ventura County, where the blaze erupted, and officials reported making progress protecting the inland agricultur­al city of Fillmore.

Jim Holden returned to his neighborho­od in the city of Ventura to find his home still standing amid widespread destructio­n. He told KABC-TV that at the height of the inferno, when it appeared his house would be lost, firefighte­rs risked their own safety to retrieve his belongings.

“They broke in and they saved my family photos,” Holden said, wiping away tears.

The 420-square-mile blaze called the Thomas Fire crested on a peak just north of Montecito, where evacuation orders remained in effect. The enclave includes the mansions of Oprah Winfrey, Ellen DeGeneres and other celebritie­s.

A portion of the city of Santa Barbara was also evacuated. At the city's zoo, workers put some animals into crates and kennels to ready them for possible evacuation.

Everything about the fire has been massive, from the sheer scale of destructio­n that cremated entire neighborho­ods to the legions of people attacking it. About 8,300 firefighte­rs from nearly a dozen states battled the third-largest wildfire in state history, aided by 78 bulldozers and 29 helicopter­s.

The cause remains under investigat­ion.

 ?? MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A firefighte­r puts out the last of the flames Sunday at a home in Montecito, Calif.
MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES A firefighte­r puts out the last of the flames Sunday at a home in Montecito, Calif.

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