The Guardian (USA)

Caldor fire: fear as raging blaze ‘knocks on the door’ of Lake Tahoe

- Gabrielle Canon and agencies

Thousands of firefighte­rs battled on Tuesday to keep a behemoth blaze from surging closer to Lake Tahoe, the blue alpine lake surrounded by resort communitie­s straddling the California­Nevada state line.

The Caldor fire, just 9% contained, has become the nation’s number one priority for firefighti­ng resources, said Thom Porter, director of the California department of forestry and fire protection. “It is knocking on the door to the Lake Tahoe basin,” Porter said. “We have all efforts in place to keep it out of the basin but we do need to also be aware that is a possibilit­y based on the way the fires have been burning.”

Porter said he personally did not believe the fire would get into the basin but that he could be proved wrong.

The Caldor fire has already incinerate­d nearly 180 sq miles (466 sq km) of El Dorado national forest and destroyed more than 630 buildings. More than 17,000 structures were still under threat.

The blaze has exhibited extreme behavior and evaded containmen­t efforts. Now surging through the steep

and rugged terrain, officials are fighting to keep the flames out of communitie­s tucked into the conifer-covered canyons.

The fire and the hazardous air quality it has produced have also put pressure on Tahoe’s tourism industry, which fuels local economies. The US Forest Service closed nine national forests in northern California over the weekend, and they will be shuttered through Labor Day.

Smoke on Monday forced the closure of public schools in parts of the Lake Tahoe area and across the state border with Nevada in the Reno and Sparks area. The air quality remained hazardous throughout the region on Tuesday, extending into the Sacramento area, with the Tahoe area measuring above 300 on the Air Quality Index.

The fire is also hugging Highway 50, now closed in both directions, cutting off a primary thoroughfa­re between South Lake Tahoe and Sacramento.

Weather conditions, however, were offering good news, Porter said. Low to moderate fire weather farther south assured officials that it was safe to deploy more resources to the fires in the north. Throughout the state, mild temperatur­es have lowered the risk of new ignitions.

Still, Porter cautioned, for the fires already burning, big battles lay ahead. “They are going to continue to grow and get bigger,” Porter said, calling the siege a marathon.

California is only halfway through what’s typically considered fire season, a period that is encroachin­g on months once considered safe. Porter noted the need to give firefighte­rs breaks and time to reset, before they “continue the fight into the deep fall”.

“These are our days,” Porter said, a nod to the annual emergencie­s fires inflict on areas across the west. “Every year we need to be ready for this type of activity.” He noted that this year California has seen nearly three times the amount of average over the five-year average.

Fueled by parched vegetation and hot, dry conditions, the fires’ intensity is directly attributab­le to climate change. Nearly half of the contiguous US is mired in drought and more than 88% of California is classified in extreme drought by the US

Drought Monitor. Extreme heatwaves that set records through the region this summer have intensifie­d the conditions and set the stage for the big blazes now burning.

The Caldor fire is just one of a dozen large wildfires raging across California with months left before winter rains are expected to bring relief.

The Dixie fire, which has burned more than 1,130 sq miles in the northern Sierra Nevada and southern Cascades, by Monday evening was 40% contained.

The California governor, Gavin Newsom, on Monday requested a presidenti­al major disaster declaratio­n for eight counties, Mark Ghilarducc­i, director of the California office of emergency services, told a briefing near Sacramento.

If approved, the declaratio­n would provide a wide range of assistance including housing, food aid, unemployme­nt and government­al emergency costs, Ghilarducc­i said.

Nearly 43,000 California­ns were under evacuation orders and more than 500 households were in shelters, he said.

While southern California has so far escaped large scale wildfires this year, Los Angeles officials on Monday urged residents to be aware of what’s going on in the north because the region’s high fire season is typically late in the year when dry, gusty Santa Ana winds blast out of the interior and flow toward the coast.

“That awareness is going to help us when it happens here in southern California,” the Los Angeles fire chief, Ralph Terrazas, said during a briefing. The mix of spring growth dried out by summer heat and high winds creates “a dangerous condition that could lead to large, fast-moving brush fires”, he said.

California’s fires were among more than 90 large, active blazes in the US, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.

“Every California­n needs to be ready,” Porter said, advising residents of the state to begin preparing a gobag with essentials now. “Be ready for the emergency that is coming to your doorstep,” he said. “And when it’s time to go – just go.”

 ?? Photograph: Michael Nigro/Pacific Press/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? California’s Caldor fire moves east toward Lake Tahoe as crews continue to battle a blaze that has grown to more than 180 sq miles with only 9% containmen­t.
Photograph: Michael Nigro/Pacific Press/Rex/Shuttersto­ck California’s Caldor fire moves east toward Lake Tahoe as crews continue to battle a blaze that has grown to more than 180 sq miles with only 9% containmen­t.
 ?? Photograph: Fred Greaves/Reuters ?? Smoke from the Caldor fire hovers over Caples Lake in Kirkwood, California.
Photograph: Fred Greaves/Reuters Smoke from the Caldor fire hovers over Caples Lake in Kirkwood, California.

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