THISDAY

Wildfire Threatens Several Thousands of Homes in Southern California, Kills 1

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Thousands were forced to flee their homes on Monday as firefighte­rs battled a fast-moving wildfire in Southern California that had charred at least 25,000 acres of land, GMA reported authoritie­s as saying.

Intensifie­d by strong winds and harsh weather conditions, the fire caused at least one death in Ventura County, emergency officials said. The person’s identity was not released, but authoritie­s attributed the death to an automobile accident that occurred as the individual attempted to evacuate.

The fire was impacting structures in downtown Ventura early Tuesday morning, with multiple residentia­l homes on fire near City Hall.

About 650 residents were under mandatory evacuation in Ventura County as of early Tuesday morning as the wildfires moved southwest toward the coast. Officials said several thousand homes in nearby areas had been evacuated due to the fire, although they cautioned that the figure was a rough estimate.

“We urge you, you must abide by these evacuation notices,” Ventura County Sheriff Jeff Dean said at a press conference late Monday. “We saw the disasters and the losses that happened up north in Sonoma and this is a fast, very dangerous moving fire.”

Officials said the blaze started as a 50-acre brush fire in a foothills area east of Santa Paula -- located about 40 minutes east of Santa Barbara -- at around 6:30 p.m. Monday.

It multiplied in size to 10,000 acres in just four hours, authoritie­s said. Santa Paula has a population of about 30,000.

Separately, Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula, California, which has about 350 students, was evacuated Monday evening.

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