USA TODAY International Edition

‘IT LOOKED LIKE DANTE’S INFERNO’

Fire consumes California community; toll could rise

- Trevor Hughes and John Bacon

PARADISE, Calif. – The Camp Fire has equaled the deadliest wildfire in California history as authoritie­s announced Sunday night that six more bodies had been found in this devastated Northern California town.

The grim news from Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea pushed the death toll to 29, matching the 1933 Griffith Park Fire in Los Angeles County. It is the deadliest fire in the Golden State since the Tunnel Fire killed 25 people in Alameda County near Oakland in 1991.

Five of the newly-found victims were found in houses and another person discovered in a vehicle, Honea said. The death toll could continue to rise, he warned, adding that 228 people are still unaccounte­d for in the fire’s path.

Firefighters battled heavy winds and parched conditions throughout

the day in their herculean struggle against the Camp Fire and two blazes in Southern California that have killed at least 31 people, destroyed thousands of homes and forced 250,000 to flee.

Thousands of firefighters fought to protect homes and lives while President Donald Trump pressed his contentiou­s case that proper forest management can alter the pattern of historic wildfires.

Gov. Jerry Brown asked the White House to issue a major disaster declaratio­n “to bolster the ongoing emergency response and help residents recover” from the devastatio­n.

“To those who have lost friends and family members, homes and businesses, know that the entire state is with you,” Brown said. “As California­ns, we are strong and resilient, and together we will recover.”

The statewide fire protection agency Cal Fire said the Camp Fire had expanded Sunday to 170 square miles and was 25 percent contained.

A mobile DNA lab was set up to aid the heartbreak­ing task of identifyin­g victims. The Camp Fire also razed more than 6,400 homes, which makes it it the most destructiv­e in state history.

Cal Fire spokesman Bill Murphy warned that gusty winds could spark “explosive fire behavior.”

“The fire conditions were moderate to extreme due to the wind,” Murphy said. “Crews continued to protect structures and fight fire aggressive­ly.”

The fire has laid waste to the town of Paradise, a community of 30,000 people 90 miles north of Sacramento. The fire burned so hot it peeled the paint off firetrucks, melted tires and blew out windows.

“It’s surreal,” said Deputy Brian Evans, 42, whose house burned down. “The fire was moving very, very, very, very, very rapidly.”

Starting next year, a statewide emergency alert system will allow counties to automatica­lly enroll residents in notification systems. In Paradise, many residents said they had no idea what was going on until the fire roared into town.

“It just looked like Dante’s Inferno,” said evacuee John Yates, 65. “Black and red was all you could see.”

In Southern California, the Woolsey Fire had killed at least two people and burned at least 177 residences, businesses and other structures while threatenin­g more than 50,000 homes. Gusty Santa Ana winds were forecast through Tuesday.

Much of glitzy, picturesqu­e Malibu was evacuated, and stars were not spared the fire’s ferocity. Shannen Doherty and Robin Thicke were among residents whose homes were destroyed.

The city of Calabasas, population 24,200, was under mandatory evacuation orders, the city tweeted Sunday.

“Thank you to the firefighters, police, first and emergency responders for doing above and beyond everything you can do to help us,” Lady Gaga tweeted. “You are true heroes.”

More than 250,000 have been chased from their homes by the Woolsey and Hill fires. The Woolsey Fire had burned 130 square miles and was 10 percent contained Sunday. The Hill Fire had burned 7 square miles and was 70 percent contained.

Trump urged residents to follow evacuation orders. Earlier, the president drew the ire of multiple profession­al firefighters associatio­ns when he tweeted that “gross mismanagem­ent of the forests” is to blame for devastatin­g fires. He threatened to withhold “billions of dollars” in federal money.

Garold Schaitberg­er, president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Fire Fighters, said the comments were “reckless and insulting.” California Profession­al Firefighters President Brian Rice called the president’s words “ill-informed, ill-timed and demeaning.”

“Nearly 60 percent of California forests are under federal management, and another two-thirds under private control,” Rice said. “It is the federal government that has chosen to divert resources away from forest management, not California.”

Trump appeared unmoved. On Sunday he tweeted that “At least With proper Forest Management, we can stop the devastatio­n constantly going on in California. Get Smart!”

 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY ?? Much of Malibu, California, was evacuated after wildfires overran entire neighborho­ods.
ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY Much of Malibu, California, was evacuated after wildfires overran entire neighborho­ods.
 ?? SOURCE Cal Fire (as of 11 a.m. Nov. 11), ESRI
KARL GELLES/USA TODAY ??
SOURCE Cal Fire (as of 11 a.m. Nov. 11), ESRI KARL GELLES/USA TODAY

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