Connecticut Post

Wildfires spare library, menace homes

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SIMI VALLEY, Calif.— A windwhippe­d outbreak of wildfires outside Los Angeles on Wednesday threatened thousands of homes and horse ranches, forced the smoky evacuation of elderly patients in wheelchair­s and narrowly bypassed the Ronald Reagan Presidenti­al Library, protected in part by a buffer zone chewed by goats.

With California tinder dry and fires burning in both the north and south, the state was at the mercy of gusty winds, on high alert for any new flames that could run wild, and weary from intentiona­l blackouts aimed at preventing power lines from sparking more destructio­n.

The blaze near the Reagan library in Simi Valley was driven by strong Santa Ana winds that are the bane of Southern California in the fall and have historical­ly fanned the most destructiv­e fires in the region.

The cause was not yet determined, but Southern California Edison filed a report with state regulators to say it began near its power lines. Electrical equipment has sparked some of California’s worst wildfires in recent years and prompted utilities to resort to precaution­ary power outages. SoCal Edison had not cut power in the area at the time this fire started.

The library, which holds the presidenti­al archives and whose grounds include the graves of Reagan and his wife, Nancy, was wellequipp­ed when flames surrounded it. It relies on a combinatio­n of hightech defenses such as fireproof doors, sprinklers and an undergroun­d vault, as well as a decidedly notech measure — hundreds of goats who are brought in every year in to graze on brush and create a firebreak.

An army of firefighte­rs helped protect the hilltop museum, and helicopter­s hit the flames, leaving some neighbors resentful as they franticall­y hosed down fires in the surroundin­g subdivisio­ns and open ranchland.

Armed with just a garden hose and wearing a mask, Beth Rivera watered down the perimeter of her large home to prevent embers from igniting dry grass and trees.

Friends helped evacuate 11 horses from the property.

Soaring flames were only 30 yards away and blowing toward her house, with no firetrucks in sight.

Animals could be heard shrieking in a barn burning next door on Tierra Rejada Road, where large ranches with riding stables and horse rings line the road. Two horses bolted into the street from the flaming barn, trailing a cloud of smoke.

“Oh gosh, this isn’t fun,” Rivera said. “There isn’t a fire unit (here) at the moment because they’re busy working on the fire close to the library. This is why I’m very worried. Because I can’t … save my home.”

Within minutes, a fire crew arrived to help Rivera and her boyfriend protect their home.

The brush fire broke out before dawn between the cities of Simi Valley and Moorpark north of Los Angeles and exploded to 2 square miles Ventura County officials said. About 7,000 homes, or around 26,000 people, were ordered evacuated, authoritie­s said.

Wind gusts of up to 68 mph were reported, forecaster­s said. Other spots in Southern California were buffeted by even stronger winds. The gusts knocked over a truck on a freeway.

Another wildfire forced the evacuation of two mobile home parks and a health care facility in Jurupa Valley, 45 mileseast of Los Angeles, where elderly people were taken out in wheelchair­s and gurneys as smoke swirled overhead. The blaze was at least 200 acres in size.

Meanwhile, about 750,000 people statewide remained without power amid efforts to prevent more wildfires.

In wine country north of San Francisco, fire officials reported progress in their battle against a 120squarem­ile blaze in Sonoma County, saying it was 30 percent contained.

The fire destroyed at least 206 structures, including 94 homes, and threatened 90,000 more, most of them homes, authoritie­s said. Fewer than 6,000 people were still out of their homes after authoritie­s lifted most of the evacuation orders.

 ?? David McNew / Getty Images ?? A firefighti­ng helicopter makes a water drop over the Easy Fire on Wednesday near Simi Valley, Calif.
David McNew / Getty Images A firefighti­ng helicopter makes a water drop over the Easy Fire on Wednesday near Simi Valley, Calif.

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