The Mercury News

PG&E may restore power today, but air quality issues are likely to remain

- By Marisa Kendall, Maggie Angst, Julia Prodis Sulek, Fiona Kelliher and Thy Vo Staff writers

SANTA ROSA >> The dreaded North Bay winds whipped up again Tuesday, raising the stakes in the fierce battle against the Kincade blaze as firefighte­rs from around the state raced to try to keep the fire from spreading and incinerati­ng more Wine Country homes.

Fueled by winds reaching speeds of up to 40 mph Tuesday afternoon and forecast to grow much stronger overnight, the fire in Sonoma County had burned more than 76,000 acres — making it to the edge of the 2017 Tubbs Fire zone — and still was only 15% contained. The blaze has destroyed 189 structures, of which 86 are single-family homes, seven are commercial buildings and 96 are sheds or outbuildin­gs, and damaged another 39. About 90,000 structures remain threatened.

“The winds are what makes it difficult. It can change on you so quickly,” said Nathaniel Armstrong, battalion chief of the Hayward

Fire Department, as he and his crew prepared for their fourth day of work on the fire.

Meanwhile, power outages and air quality issues persisted throughout the Bay

Area. As of Tuesday evening, 419,000 PG&E customers were without power as a result of planned outages intended to prevent PG&E equipment from starting wildfires, Mark Quinlan, PG&E senior director of emergency preparedne­ss and response, said during a media call. The utility expected to receive the all-clear to restore power to Northern California customers by 8 a.m. today.

On Tuesday, PG&E notified Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office that it’s planning to issue rebates to affected customers. More details on the plans were not immediatel­y available. The governor earlier this month pressured the utility to provide $100 rebates for each residentia­l customer who lost power, and $250 for business customers.

On Monday the California Public Utilities Commission announced it will open an investigat­ion into the shutoffs.

At the same time, temperatur­es around the Bay Area are expected to

drop significan­tly this week — to near or below freezing in some places — making it harder for residents without power to keep warm.

And the Bay Area was hit with another “Spare the Air” alert for today — the third day in a row. While the air was expected to clear this morning, it likely will worsen again this afternoon as winds decrease and smoke drains south into the Bay Area, according to a news release from the Bay Area Air Quality Management District.

The fierce winds died down momentaril­y Monday, but the fire continued its eastward push, and a spot fire that ignited in Lake County continued to grow. As the sun went down Tuesday in Sonoma County, and the National Weather Service predicted wind gusts of up to 60 mph overnight before subsiding this morning, firefighte­rs were gearing up for the worst at three battlegrou­nds.

At the fire’s western border, they worried the blaze would jump Highway 101 and advance into a wooded, hilly area near the town of Windsor.

“If it crosses 101, we feel like we’re gonna lose this thing,” Sonoma County Battalion Chief Mark Dunne said Tuesday afternoon as he marshaled crews to watch for spot fires that could ignite from embers smoldering after an epic battle there Saturday.

Firefighte­rs also had their eye on Shiloh Road, about 2 miles south of Windsor. At the fire’s southern border, they were watching the unincorpor­ated area of Mark West Springs, which was ravaged in 2017 by the Tubbs Fire. Strong northeast wind currents could push the fire down the canyon toward the Larkfield-Wikiup area and Santa Rosa — just as it did two years ago.

“To see how devastated our community was when that fire came through the town was hard. And two years later, here we go again,” Santa Rosa Fire Capt. Jack Thomas said, peering over the hilltop from Pepperwood Preserve Road and into the smoke in the distance. “So we’re doing everything in our power to make sure that never, ever happens again. Or that we at least have some control over the fire compared to in 2017.”

By this morning, the worst — for now — was expected to be over. Winds were predicted to die down after about 9 a.m., said weather service meteorolog­ist Will Pi.

But shifting winds and changing conditions Tuesday added to the stress felt by some evacuees trying desperatel­y to determine if their neighborho­ods were in the fire’s path. In front of Finley Hall at the Sonoma County Fairground­s in Santa Rosa, where evacuees with small pets are staying, Allison and Gail Baker peered at a map of the fire tacked to a wooden board, tracing their fingers from the southern tip of the fire to their home in Windsor.

It’s been confusing to follow where the blaze is moving and to know whether their home is facing a serious threat, said Allison Baker, though she was reassured by the efforts of both Cal Fire and the Red Cross.

“We (initially) thought we’d be here for three days, but we didn’t know the magnitude of the windstorm,” she said.

For some of the fire’s smallest evacuees, questions and worries abound. Jazmin Jacinto and Elias Dehmes, who evacuated to the fairground­s from north Santa Rosa, tried to keep spirits high for Dehmes’ two daughters, Ezra, 2, and Nova, 3.

As fire trucks from across the country passed by the center, the family stood outside, waving and signaling for a honk from firefighte­rs — and cheering when their efforts proved successful.

“I think we got that one,” Dehmes said, giving his daughter a high-five after a truck full of Red Cross personnel reciprocat­ed their vigorous waves and smiles.

“They’ve been asking a lot of questions, and sleeping was a bit hard last night,” Jacinto said about the girls. “But we just told them it was a giant sleepover, and they’ve been adjusting pretty well.”

Cal Fire Division Chief Jonathan Cox said the fire crews have been working as hard as they can to get the fire contained and help the community recover.

“I think the best way to describe it is, we’re in a battle rhythm,” he said. “The shifts are very structured now. We have resources that are assigned to areas shift over shift, and I think firefighte­rs are ready to turn the corner after this wind event and really put some closure and some stability back into the community.”

Cox confirmed that there was a minor medical emergency on the fire line Monday, but he did not have additional details.

Meanwhile, law enforcemen­t was cracking down on behavior that could aggravate the already precarious situation in the North Bay. On Tuesday morning, California Highway Patrol Capt. Aristotle Wolfe, commander of the Santa Rosa area CHP, stopped a motorist on Highway 101 in Petaluma who had tossed a cigarette butt out the window.

“I’m in an unmarked car. I rarely make stops,” Wolfe said. “But I wasn’t going to let that one go — with smoke in the air and tinder on the highway” from winds blowing branches.

“This is an extremely dangerous time,” he said, “and unsafe or lawless behavior won’t be tolerated.”

 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Firefighte­rs from Sisters, Oregon, receive instructio­ns before heading up to the fire lines at the Kincade Fire Emergency Operations Center at the Sonoma County Fairground­s in Santa Rosa on Tuesday.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Firefighte­rs from Sisters, Oregon, receive instructio­ns before heading up to the fire lines at the Kincade Fire Emergency Operations Center at the Sonoma County Fairground­s in Santa Rosa on Tuesday.

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