Search for bodies begins as fires continue to rage
PARADISE, Calif. — Search teams were scouring the devastated town of Paradise on Tuesday with the grim expectation of finding more bodies in the aftermath of the deadliest wildfire in California history.
Finding remains is a painstaking process that is often guided by cadaver dogs after an intense fire like the one that struck Paradise, where 48 people have been killed, 200 are missing and much is reduced to ashes. Coroners and dozens of other searchers have fanned out across the area, and two portable morgues are waiting to collect the dead.
The Camp Fire, as the blaze that ripped through Paradise is known, is only about 30 percent contained, and has burned 125,000 acres. It continues to rage in the hills and ravines east of the city of Chico.
It is also the most destructive wildfire in California history, with more than 7,600 structures destroyed, most of them homes.
Two other wildfires continue to burn in Southern California. Two people have died in the Woolsey Fire, which is burning west of Los Angeles and has swept through parts of Malibu. The fire is 35 percent contained and has charred more than 96,000 acres, but firefighters believed they were “getting the upper hand.”
A third fire, the Hill Fire in Ventura County, has been kept to about 4,500 acres and is 90 percent contained.
With winds gusting up to 86 mph in San Diego County on Tuesday and a red-flag fire warning in effect, a utility company turned off electric power in some areas, and at least five school districts canceled classes. Around 25,000 customers in the county were without power, either from precautionary shutdowns or from losses caused by heavy winds.
Paradise had a population of 27,000 before the fire.
In Southern California, Los Angeles County fire chief, Daryl Osby said he could find no record of a larger wildfire in his county’s history. Two people had died in the fire and about 435 structures had been destroyed.
“We’re getting the upper hand here,” Osby said, “and there is a lot of confidence as it relates to the containment and control of this fire.”
Frustrated with border
Trump has soured on Nielsen and White House chief of staff John Kelly, in part over frustration that his administration is not doing more to address what he has called a crisis at the U.S.Mexico border, according to the people. But the scope of the contemplated changes is far broader as Trump gears up for a wave of Democratic oversight requests.
According to people familiar with the situation, Trump is also discussing replacing Kelly with Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, Nick Ayers. Kelly, a retired Marine general, has been credited with bringing order and process to a chaotic West Wing, but he has fallen out of favor with the president as well as presidential daughter Ivanka Trump and son-in-law Jared