The Bakersfield Californian

Utility equipment eyed as source of fire near LA

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Federal investigat­ors are looking into whether a huge wildfire near Los Angeles was sparked by Southern California Edison utility equipment, according to the company.

Edison has turned over a section of an overhead conductor from its transmissi­on facility in the area where the Bobcat Fire started more than two weeks ago, company spokesman David Song said Wednesday.

The initial report of fire was near Cogswell Dam in the San Gabriel Mountains at 12:21 p.m. on Sept. 6.

In an incident report filed with the state Public Utilities Commission last week, Edison said its nearby equipment experience­d an issue five minutes earlier, 12:16 p.m.

A circuit at a nearby substation experience­d a “relay operation,” indicating its equipment detected some kind of disturbanc­e or event, Song said.

Cameras captured smoke developing in the area around 12:10 p.m., prior to the activity on Edison’s circuit, he said.

Edison will assist the U.S. Forest Service in its investigat­ion of the fire that has burned more than two dozen homes and other buildings on its way to becoming one of the largest blazes in Los Angeles County history.

“Southern California Edison understand­s this is a difficult time for the many people who are being impacted by the

Bobcat fire,” Song said. “Our thoughts are also with those affected by the wildfires currently burning across the western United States.”

The Forest Service and the Public Utilities Commission didn’t immediatel­y respond to emails seeking more informatio­n.

In recent years California utilities have strategica­lly shut off power to some areas in order to prevent its equipment from sparking wildfires. Edison did not have any planned shutoffs in the days before the Bobcat fire erupted.

Firefighte­rs are finally starting to tame the blaze, with containmen­t on Wednesday hitting 38 percent — a jump from just 17 percent a day earlier.

Crews took advantage of two days of calmer weather after erratic winds last weekend pushed flames out of the Angeles National Forest and into communitie­s in the desert foothills, fire spokesman Larry Smith said Wednesday.

“Because the fire transferre­d out of the timber and into the light fuels near the desert, we were able to make some real progress,” Smith said. Crews will shore up containmen­t lines ahead of hotter, gusty weather predicted for the weekend, he said.

Thousands of residents remain under evacuation orders and warnings. It’s one of dozens of other major wildfires across the West, including five in California that are among the largest in state history.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / AP ?? The Bobcat Fire burns in the distance beyond a Joshua tree Saturday in Juniper Hills.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / AP The Bobcat Fire burns in the distance beyond a Joshua tree Saturday in Juniper Hills.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States