Stabroek News

Oregon’s wildfires force mass evacuation­s as shifting weather offers glimmer of hope

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PORTLAND, Ore., (Reuters) - An unpreceden­ted spate of deadly wildfires raging across Oregon kept half a million people under evacuation alert yesterday even as weary firefighte­rs took advantage of improved weather to go on the offensive against the blazes.

The fires have destroyed thousands of homes in days, making Oregon the latest epicenter in a larger summer outbreak of fires sweeping the western United States, collective­ly scorching a landscape the size of New Jersey and killing at least 25 people.

Although at least five lives were known to have been lost in Oregon this week, Governor Kate Brown has warned the death toll could grow far higher and said on Friday that dozens of people had been reported missing in three counties.

Office of Emergency Management chief Andrew Phelps said disaster teams searching the scorched ruins of a half-dozen small towns laid to waste were bracing to encounter possible “mass fatality incidents.”

The Pacific Northwest as a whole has borne the brunt of an incendiary onslaught that began around Labor Day, darkening the sky with smoke and ash that has beset northern California, Oregon and Washington with some of the world’s worst air-quality levels.

The firestorms, some of the largest on record in California and Oregon, were driven by high winds that howled across the region for days in the midst of recordbrea­king heat. Scientists say global warming has also contribute­d to extremes in wet and dry seasons, causing vegetation to flourish then dry out, leaving more abundant, volatile fuel for wildfires.

“This is a climate damn emergency. This is real and it’s happening. This is the perfect storm,” California Governor Gavin Newsom told reporters from a charred mountainsi­de near Oroville, California.

More than 3,900 homes and other structures have been incinerate­d in California alone over the past three weeks.

In southern Oregon, an apocalypti­c scene of charred residentia­l subdivisio­ns and trailer parks stretched for miles along Highway 99 south of Medford through the neighborin­g towns of Phoenix and Talent, one of the most devastated areas.

Beatriz Gomez Bolanos, 41, told her four children to close their eyes while fires raged on both sides of their car during their escape from the Bear Creek Mobile Home Park south of Medford, even as embers rained rain down on their house.

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