The Mercury News

For the cities once in fire’s path — relief

Firefighte­rs hold off blaze as evacuees return

- By Nico Savidge, Fiona Kelliher, Thy Vo, Maggie Angst and Jason Green Staff writers

Hours after firefighte­rs feared disaster from high winds whipping the Kincade Fire toward thousands of Wine Country homes, relief washed over Sonoma County on Wednesday after it turned out crews had gained ground overnight on the 76,825-acre blaze and appeared to have gotten the upper hand.

“I would say that there’s a lot of optimism that we have turned the corner for the better on this fire,” said Cal Fire Division

Chief Jonathan Cox at a news conference Wednesday night.

The winds had come and gone, not quite as fierce nor as long-lasting as had been predicted. Although the burned area increased by more than 600 acres, firefighte­rs held back the flames licking perilously close to neighborho­ods and brought containmen­t of the fire to 45%. The fierce winds that drove the fire over the past week have tapered off. Though dangerousl­y dry conditions still exist, forecasts call for calm winds for the next several days.

In Windsor, Healdsburg, Geyservill­e, Sebastopol and Santa Rosa, tens of thousands of people were allowed to return to homes that many spent days worrying they might never see again, af

ter Sonoma County authoritie­s lifted mandatory evacuation orders Wednesday afternoon. Roughly 5,790 residents are still waiting for word on when they can go back.

Elsewhere, the lighter winds prompted PG&E to cancel planned power shutoffs. Offshore winds brought cold temperatur­es to the region and also pushed out over the Pacific Ocean the wildfire smoke that had made local air hazy and potentiall­y dangerous.

At one point, the Kincade Fire had roared to the edges of Windsor, raising fears that the city would become the latest community swallowed up by California wildfires. But no homes in the city were destroyed.

As evacuees pulled off Highway 101 on Wednesday, they were greeted by waving city officials holding a sign reading “Welcome home Windsor residents” along Old Redwood Highway.

“We were told to expect massive losses in Windsor, and we were preparing for that. A wall of fire hit the northern part of our town,” Mayor Dominic Foppoli said as people cheered and honked in passing cars. “The best part now is we get to welcome residents home to the same beautiful town they left.”

With no rain in the immediate forecast and air throughout Northern California still dangerousl­y dry, officials cautioned that the Kincade Fire is still a threat. As a message that residents still need to be vigilant and prepared to leave if ordered, evacuation warnings remain in place for many of the Sonoma County areas where orders were lifted, as well as parts of the Alexander Valley and the now firescorch­ed mountains nearby.

The fire had destroyed 266 structures by Wednesday, of which 133 were homes and seven were commercial buildings. Another 47 structures, 32 of them homes, have been damaged.

“Although the count of damaged and destroyed structures continues to climb, that does not mean that they have been destroyed in the past 24 hours,” said Cox, the Cal Fire division chief. “Our damage inspection teams are really catching up on the week’s worth of work that’s out there.”

Crews had dug in for a difficult battle Tuesday night. Though the winds weren’t as severe as those over the weekend that prompted massive evacuation orders, gusts from 45 mph to as high as 67 mph were still clocked across North Bay peaks.

The fire grew slightly along its eastern perimeter overnight, according to Cal Fire, but calmer winds elsewhere helped to ease the battle along the fire’s southern perimeter near Windsor and the eastern portion near Middletown.

“We knew that if we got through this without any significan­t increase in the fire activity or acreage burned, it’s definitely great news for us,” Cal Fire spokesman Edwin Zuniga said Wednesday.

Along the fire’s southweste­rn perimeter on Mark Springs Road, the dying winds came as a welcome reprieve after crews geared up for the worst, said Santa Rosa fire Capt. Jack Thomas on Wednesday morning.

The area had been ravaged in 2017 by the Tubbs Fire, and crews worried that strong northeast wind currents could push the fire down the canyon.

“These guys got in there and did a lot of work to make sure that there was nothing on the lines should we have any type of fire or winds come through here,” Thomas said.

With a red flag warning in effect until late afternoon Wednesday, crews worked to secure perimeters around highly populated areas in the southern and eastern portion of the fire, Zuniga said. Inspectors also continued to canvass neighborho­ods — some of which only recently became safe to access — to assess structures that may have been damaged or destroyed.

Looking back over the past day, National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Drew Peterson said Wednesday that weather officials are “incredibly impressed” with how firefighte­rs managed to secure the lines overnight in the face of ferocious winds.

“We’re at the tail end of this,” Peterson said.

Even as Wednesday brought good news, evacuation­s, power outages and fire danger had taken their toll around the county.

In Cloverdale, just south of where the Kincade Fire broke out, hundreds of immigrant farmworker­s fled from their homes over the weekend after sheriff’s deputies came by telling them to leave. Not knowing exactly what was happening and where they would go, most left without food, money or medicine and went to the largest gathering place in the city, the Cloverdale Citrus Fairground­s.

But the area was not a designated evacuation center and did not have electricit­y, food or shelter. Families slept in cars and tents in the parking lot.

By Monday, groups rallied to provide warm meals, care packages and blankets, and by Wednesday the Red Cross had arrived to provide more aid.

“Unfortunat­ely, without gas and money, many of them were stuck here,” said Kate Young, CEO of the fairground­s. “And personally, I couldn’t just close the gates. The community needed this.”

Two years after the Larkfield-Wikiup area was devastated during the Tubbs Fire, Jeri and Tony Deatherage watched from their Bad Ass Coffee shop as residents returned from evacuation­s. This time around, they came back to find that homes that were newly rebuilt or still under constructi­on had not been touched by the flames.

“Its a huge relief,” said Jeri, as she made another pot of coffee on Wednesday morning.

Although their cafe has been under an evacuation order for more than four days, the couple returned on Tuesday to check in. When a firefighte­r stopped to ask for a cup of coffee, they immediatel­y opened their doors — and have remained open for more than 24 hours straight since.

“There was no secondgues­sing,” Tony said, handing out free coffee and pastries to any firefighte­rs and first responders who stopped in.

“It’s just sad that October has become such a stressful month,” Jeri said. “In all the years that I’ve lived here, this has not been the norm.

“I guess life is changing.”

 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Evacuees wait for volunteers from the Redwood Empire Food Bank in Santa Rosa to distribute food at the Cloverdale Citrus Fairground­s in Cloverdale on Tuesday.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Evacuees wait for volunteers from the Redwood Empire Food Bank in Santa Rosa to distribute food at the Cloverdale Citrus Fairground­s in Cloverdale on Tuesday.

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