The Mercury News

48 DEAD — SEARCH PICKS UP

Dozens still missing; identifyin­g victims a long, slow process

- By Emily DeRuy and Robert Salonga Staff writers

BUTTE COUNTY >> With the Camp Fire claiming the lives of a record 48 people so far and the search for the missing intensifyi­ng, details about the victims are beginning to emerge, putting a heartbreak­ingly human face to the stark numbers of a wildfire that has ravaged 130,000 acres.

When what is now the deadliest and most destructiv­e fire in California’s history tore through Paradise on Thursday morning, all signs suggest Ernest Foss Jr., 63, attempted to escape from his home on Edgewood Lane. But the flames were too hot and too fast.

In his online writings, Foss described himself as a “bedbound” two-time cancer survivor who relied on an oxygen tank.

Just outside the charred remains of Foss’ home Tuesday, remnants of the tank, a medical bed, a wheelchair and a walking cane were strewn amid the rubble.

Foss’ daughter, Angela, wrote on Facebook that authoritie­s told her family that her father’s body was found Saturday outside his home, alongside his dog Bernice. They believe that her father died just hours after the fire began.

Foss’ stepson and caregiver, 36-yearold Andrew Burt, is still missing, she wrote, and a friend told KTVU that Burt acted “heroically” by staying with Foss as the fire bore down to try to help him escape.

Before he moved to Paradise, Foss was a longtime resident of the Bay Area. He lived in Menlo Park and Mill Valley before moving to San Francisco, where he attended high school in the 1970s at the defunct McAteer High School. The campus is now home to the Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts.

According to Foss’ Facebook page and family accounts, he was once a studio rock musician in San Francisco. Later in life, Foss attended Heald College at the school’s now-shuttered Hayward campus and worked in informatio­n technology for the college after graduating in 2003.

Foss frequently posted on social media and his personal websites about music and his life experience­s under the names “Yoshi Matrix” and “Yoshi’s World.”

“Be glad in his freedom from pain and suffering, and smile at the thought of the loved ones who must have welcomed him into Heaven,” his daughter wrote.

Two other victims — Jesus Fernandez of Concow and Carl Wiley of Magalia — also have been publicly identified.

In the coming days and weeks, more of the sons and daughters, mothers and fathers who perished in the blaze will be identified. Dozens of people are still missing. Each day, recovery workers and cadaver dogs sifting through ashes find new remains.

Workers from Chico State’s anthropolo­gy department are on hand to assist with identifyin­g bone fragments, and state forensic experts are helping evaluate DNA samples. But it could be weeks before their loved ones have answers.

And still, at 35 percent containmen­t, the fire rages on, with the area burned — 130,000 acres — already more than four times the size of San Francisco.

In addition to the lives lost, some 8,817 structures are gone. Several firefighte­rs have suffered burns, including a fire captain and firefighte­r who were injured when a propane tank exploded.

The cause of the fire remains under investigat­ion, but PG&E reported problems with a power line in the area, and on Tuesday a lawsuit was filed against the utility company alleging its failure to maintain equipment sparked the fire.

In Paradise on Tuesday, a line of about half a dozen American flags sprang up along each side of Skyway downtown, pretty much the only thing still standing in the town of some 26,000.

With most residents evacuated, the streets were filled with workers, from PG&E to tree-removal crews. A thick haze of smoke still hung in the air, along with an eerie silence, save for the sound of an occasional falling tree. In some places, power lines dangled just 6 or 7 feet above the ground.

When the fire burned through town, flames crept up to the edge of the local cemetery but then stopped suddenly. Green grass, speckled with fallen autumn leaves, still surrounded weathered headstones.

With heavy smoke from the Butte County wildfire continuing to drift across the region, the Bay Area air quality remained unhealthy Tuesday and is expected to stay that way until at least Friday, according to the Bay Area Air Quality Management District.

Many local school districts

say they are monitoring the air quality and amending their schedules accordingl­y.

Fremont Union School District’s Brian Killgore said schools in the district began the day by limiting students’ outdoor activities and keeping those with asthma and other respirator­y issues indoors. With the air quality becoming increasing­ly worse, schools moved to a strictly indoor schedule and canceled all outdoor afterschoo­l sports and activities.

“We will re-evaluate in the morning and move on from there,” Killgore said. “We have parent-teacher conference­s this week so most schools have early dismissal, which is helpful.”

On Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke — who blamed “environmen­tal terrorist groups” for inhibiting the government’s ability to manage forests and increasing the severity of the state’s fires during a radio interview with Breitbart News despite

overwhelmi­ng evidence that climate change is a driving factor behind the fires — is expected to visit people affected by the Camp Fire with Gov. Jerry Brown.

Afterward, he’ll travel to Southern California, which is fighting its own infernos in Los Angeles and Ventura counties.

The Woolsey fire in the Malibu area has destroyed thousands of acres and destroyed homes of celebritie­s Miley Cyrus and Gerard

Butler.

In many ways, the raging fires in Malibu and Paradise — two of the cities hardest hit by the state’s wildfires — provide a window into two very different California­s, a distinctio­n that is sure to become clearer as residents begin to rebuild.

Malibu, in Los Angeles County, is a wealthy, welleducat­ed city with median home values in the coastal community among the top 2 percent in the state — $1.8 million in 2016, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Paradise, in Butte County, is in the bottom third of median home values in the state. At $201,000, homes in the community are about half the California median income.

In the coming months, residents there will have to

decide whether to rebuild or move elsewhere.

Even as they provided initial informatio­n about the process of returning to burned areas at a news conference Tuesday night, Butte County officials warned that the fire is still active, with record levels of dryness and fuel available to burn.

“The area remains quite ready for continued fire growth,” Cal Fire spokesman Jonathan Pangburn said. “We are not fully out of the woods yet.”

 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Alameda County Sheriff’s Office and San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office personnel, from the coroner’s bureau, along with a Butte County Sheriff’s deputy, examine a victim of the Camp Fire as forensic experts sift through remains in Paradise on Tuesday.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Alameda County Sheriff’s Office and San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office personnel, from the coroner’s bureau, along with a Butte County Sheriff’s deputy, examine a victim of the Camp Fire as forensic experts sift through remains in Paradise on Tuesday.
 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? An oxygen tank and blanket remain in front of the home of Ernest Foss Jr. in Paradise on Tuesday. Foss, 63, who grew up in the Bay Area, was one of the victims of the Camp Fire.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER An oxygen tank and blanket remain in front of the home of Ernest Foss Jr. in Paradise on Tuesday. Foss, 63, who grew up in the Bay Area, was one of the victims of the Camp Fire.
 ?? JANE TYSKA —STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Chico State forensics experts sift through human remains of a Camp Fire victim in Paradise.
JANE TYSKA —STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Chico State forensics experts sift through human remains of a Camp Fire victim in Paradise.
 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A Jack in the Box restaurant is seen after the Camp Fire in Paradise on Tuesday.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A Jack in the Box restaurant is seen after the Camp Fire in Paradise on Tuesday.

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