Los Angeles Times

Expect more smoke pollution

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Wildfire haze hovered over much of Southern California on Thursday and could continue through Friday.

pursuit began shortly after midnight after Riverside police identified the car as stolen, authoritie­s said. Officers tried to stop the vehicle, but the driver and a passenger sped off.

As the car neared the field on Crestmore, it jumped several curbs and blew out its tires, said Officer Ryan Railsback, spokesman for the Riverside Police Department. The car broke down in a field, and investigat­ors believe that heat from its wheels ignited the fire. Flames engulfed the car, then the field, before spreading to the Santa Ana riverbed, police said.

Two men were arrested in connection with the incident.

Bryan Anguiano, 23, of Jurupa Valley was booked into Robert Presley Detention Center on suspicion of felony evading, car theft and possession of a stolen vehicle, along with an outstandin­g felony warrant for burglary and false impersonat­ion, the Riverside Police Department said in a news release. Authoritie­s also plan to charge him with arson violations stemming from the fire, police said.

Kevin Hidalgo, 28, of Riverside was arrested on an outstandin­g felony warrant for allegedly violating conditions of a post-release community supervisio­n program, police said.

Evacuation orders stemming from the fires in Jurupa Valley and San Bernardino had been lifted by Thursday evening.

The blazes erupted after several days of strong Santa Ana winds and rock-bottom relative humidity that prompted the National Weather Service to issue a rare “extreme red-flag warning.”

The gusts were expected to ease Thursday night, but critical fire weather warnings were extended through Friday night for the windiest spots of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, continuing red-f lag conditions for an additional 24 hours.

The red-flag warnings — which sound the alarm for high winds, dry air and parched vegetation — will persist for inland mountains and valleys in Los Angeles and Ventura counties, and for the Santa Clarita Valley because of ongoing winds from the northeast and very dry air. Other areas were expected to see red-flag warnings expire as gusts eased Thursday evening to 25 mph to 35 mph.

Meanwhile, firefighte­rs continued to make progress on other fires burning around the state. The 1,800acre Easy fire, which tore through Simi Valley on Wednesday, was 60% contained by Thursday evening. Despite strong winds, crews were able to hold fire lines in place, stopping the blaze from spreading into adjacent communitie­s, said Mike DesForges, a spokesman for the Ventura County Fire Department.

The Getty fire, which broke out Monday near the Getty Center and burned 12 homes and 745 acres, was 52% contained as of Thursday night. Most evacuation orders prompted by the fire had been lifted. Investigat­ors believe the blaze was sparked when a tree branch hit a power line.

The Tick fire, which burned 29 homes in Canyon Country last week, is now 100% contained.

In Northern California, the Kincade fire that roared through Sonoma County wine country was 65% contained after burning more than 77,000 acres and nearly 350 structures.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? AIRDROPS aided fire crews battling a wind-driven blaze that was dubbed the 46 fire in Jurupa Valley.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times AIRDROPS aided fire crews battling a wind-driven blaze that was dubbed the 46 fire in Jurupa Valley.

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