Baltimore Sun

Troops assist with grim search

Death toll reaches 51 from devastatin­g blazes in California

- By Kathleen Ronayne and Andrew Selsky

PARADISE, Calif. — With scores of people still missing, National Guard troops searched Wednesday through charred debris for more victims of California’s deadliest wildfire as top federal and state officials toured the ruins of a community destroyed by the flames.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke joined Gov. Jerry Brown on a visit to the leveled town of Paradise, telling reporters it was the worst fire devastatio­n he had ever seen.

“Now is not the time to point fingers,” Zinke said. “There are lots of reasons these catastroph­ic fires are happening.” He cited warmer temperatur­es, dead trees and poor forest management.

Brown, a critic of President Donald Trump’s policies, said he spoke with Trump, who pledged federal assistance.

“This is so devastatin­g that I don’t really have the words to describe it,” Brown said, saying officials would need to learn how to better prevent fires from becoming so deadly.

About 7,700 homes were destroyed when flames hit Paradise, a former goldmining camp popular with retirees, on Nov. 8, killing at least 48 people in California’s deadliest wildfire. There were also three fatalities from separate blazes in Southern California. Authoritie­s tag a body found amid the devastatio­n Wednesday in the Holly Hills neighborho­od of Paradise, Calif.

It will take years to rebuild the town of 27,000, if people decide that’s what should be done, said Brock Long, administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The town in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada looks like a wasteland.

“The infrastruc­ture is basically a total rebuild at this point,” Long said. “You’re not going to be able to rebuild Paradise the way it was.”

Temporary schools and hospitals will be brought in, Long said. Officials are also looking to bring in mobile homes for thousands of people left homeless.

Debris removal in Paradise and outlying communitie­s will have to wait until the search for victims finishes, he said.

That grim search continued Wednesday.

On one street, ash and dust flew up as roughly 20 National Guard members wearing white jumpsuits, helmets and breathing masks lifted giant heaps of bent and burned metal, in what was left of a home. Pink and blue chalk drawings of a cat and a flower remained on the driveway, near a scorched toy truck.

The soldiers targeted homes of the missing. If anything resembling human remains is found, a coroner takes over.

After the soldiers finished at the site, a chaplain huddled with them in prayer.

The number of missing is “fluctuatin­g every day” as people are located or remains are found, said Steve Collins, a deputy with the Butte County Sheriff’s Department.

Authoritie­s on Wednesday released the names of about 100 people who are still missing, including many in their 80s and 90s, and dozens more could still be unaccounte­d for. Sheriff ’s department spokeswoma­n Megan McMann said the list was incomplete because detectives were concerned they would be overwhelme­d with calls from relatives if the entire list were released.

“We can’t release them all at once,” McMann said. “So they are releasing the names in batches.”

Authoritie­s have not updated the total number of missing since Sunday, when 228 people were unaccounte­d for.

Sol Bechtold’s 75-yearold mother was not on the list. Her house burned down along with the rest of her neighborho­od in Magalia, a community just north of Paradise. “The list they published is missing a lot of names,” said Bechtold, who’s still searching shelters for his mother, a widow who lived alone and did not drive.

A sheriff’s deputy asked Bechtold for informatio­n that could identify her remains, like any history of broken bones. He told the officer she had a knee re- placement.

“I feel horrible for the sheriff. I feel horrible for the people of Paradise and Magalia,” he said. “It’s just a no-win situation unless a few hundred folks just show up out of nowhere.”

To speed up identifica­tion of remains, officials are using portable devices that can identify genetic material in a couple of hours, rather than days or weeks.

Accounts of narrow escapes from the flames continued to emerge. More than a dozen people who were trapped by a wall of fire survived by plunging into a cold lake.

The San Francisco Chronicle reported Wednesday that a family of four, their 90-year- old neighbor and their pets sought safety in the chilly Concow Reservoir after the roaring fire surrounded their homes.

The family stood in shoulder- deep water as flames singed the vegetation on the shore behind them. Not far away, at least a dozen others rushed into the lake after the caravan of vehicles they were in was cut off by flames.

Before the Paradise tragedy, the deadliest single fire on record in California was a 1933 blaze in Griffith Park in Los Angeles that killed 29.

The cause of the fires remained under investigat­ion, but they broke out around the time and place that two utilities reported equipment trouble. People who lost homes in the Northern California blaze sued Pacific Gas & Electric Co. on Tuesday, accusing the utility of negligence and blaming it for the fire.

 ?? JOSH EDELSON/GETTY-AFP ??
JOSH EDELSON/GETTY-AFP

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