The Arizona Republic

California wildfires rage during lightning blitz

Firefighte­rs short on personnel, equipment

- Janie Har and Martha Mendoza NOAH BERGER/AP

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. – More than two dozen major fires were scorching California on Thursday, largely the result of an unpreceden­ted lightning siege that dropped nearly 11,000 strikes over several days.

“This is definitely a historic lightning event,” said Daniel Berlant, an assistant deputy director with the state Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. “The last time we had a lightning siege that was even comparable was in 2008.”

The fires have destroyed 175 structures, including homes, and are threatenin­g 50,000 more, he said; 33 civilians and firefighte­rs have been injured. Most of the activity is in Northern California, where fires have chewed through nearly 500 square miles of brushland, rural areas, canyon country and dense forest surroundin­g San Francisco.

Fires also burned in the Sierra Nevada and Southern California wild lands.

With so many burning at once, firefighte­rs say they’re unable to tap resources such as extra personnel and equipment. In Marin County, just north of San Francisco where a small fire is burning near the Pacific Ocean, county Fire Chief Jason Weber said they are waiting for assistance from Montana to arrive this weekend.

He said that in his 25 years in fire service, “we’ve never seen this level of draw-down” with heavy competitio­n within the state and in the western

U.S. for equipment and people.

Berlant said the state has requested 375 engines from out of state, with some already in the state and others scheduled to arrive soon.

About 26,000 people in Santa Cruz County were under orders to evacuate, sheriff ’s department chief deputy Chris Clark said Thursday. Another 1,000 people in neighborin­g San Mateo County were also under evacuation orders.

Officials said the fire had the potential to grow significan­tly in the next 24 hours and one of the tools they have – given stretched resources – was for people to leave their homes when told. But some people refused when officers went door to door Wednesday night, said Cal Fire Chief Mark Brunton.

“With the resources that we are lacking, we ask you to help us do our jobs and to keep the public safe,” he said.

In central California, a pilot on a water dropping mission in western Fresno County died Wednesday morning when his helicopter crashed. The pilot was working with Fillmore-based Guardian Helicopter­s, which had a contract with the state fire agency to provide emergency services, said Zoe Keliher, an investigat­or with the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

A Pacific Gas & Electric utility worker died at a fire in the Vacaville area between San Francisco and Sacramento, but circumstan­ces were not clear. The worker was found in a vehicle, and CPR was performed, but he was pronounced dead at a hospital, said a California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection statement.

He had been clearing poles and lines to make the area safe for firefighte­rs, Cal Fire said.

 ??  ?? Flames consume a home in Napa County, Calif. Fire crews scrambled to contain dozens of wildfires sparked by lightning strikes.
Flames consume a home in Napa County, Calif. Fire crews scrambled to contain dozens of wildfires sparked by lightning strikes.

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