The Morning Call (Sunday)

Blazes the worst in state history

Trump tweet blames losses on the state’s forest management.

- By Cleve R. Wootson Jr., Joel Achenbach, Lindsey Bever and Eli Rosenberg

MALIBOU LAKE, CALIF. – A growing trio of wildfires incinerate­d large swaths of Northern and Southern California over the last three days, killing 23 people, displacing hundreds of thousands and turning a retirement community called Paradise into acres of ash and charred foundation­s. The massive Camp Fire north of Sacramento had destroyed some 6,700 structures, becoming the most destructiv­e inferno in a state with a long and calamitous history of fires.

Since Thursday, more than 200,000 California­ns have been displaced — greater than the

population of Orlando, Fla. In addition to the dead, dozens have been reported missing. Authoritie­s warned that the property losses would be staggering. A pair of fires near Los Angeles threatened Malibu mansions and destroyed Paramount Ranch, the filming location of the HBO series “Westworld.”

Before officials announced the latest grim statistics and rising death toll Saturday, President Donald Trump fanned an ongoing dispute with California leaders, blaming mismanagem­ent of state resources for the destructio­n and death.

“There is no reason for these massive, deadly and costly forest fires in California except that forest management is so poor,” Trump tweeted Saturday morning. “Billions of dollars are given each year, with so many lives lost, all because of gross mismanagem­ent of the forests. Remedy now, or no more Fed payments!”

California officials have countered Trump’s claims in the past, saying that ever-intense fires are the result of global warming, which dries up vegetation and turns fire-prone areas of the state into a tinderbox.

Saturday morning was the first time Trump spoke publicly about the California blazes.

In Northern California’s Butte County, about 90 miles north of the state capital, Sacramento, residents described fleeing a catastroph­ic fire that began Thursday. The inferno grew with incredible speed, claimed nine lives and turned a sunny day into an end-of-days scene of flames, smoke, sparks and wide destructio­n.

Named after nearby Camp Creek, the blaze is not yet done. It had burned at least 90,000 acres, more than 140 square miles, and was only 20 percent contained by Saturday, causing officials to declare a state of emergency for a fire likely to worsen over the weekend.

Officials warned that “red flag” conditions — hot, dry and windy weather that makes the land ripe for a fire’s spread — would persist on and off through Monday.

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea told reporters at a news conference Friday evening that officials found nine people who had been killed by the fire: Four were found dead in their cars in Paradise, down from the five officials had spoken about earlier; three outside of houses; and two others, one in a home, and another near a car. Honea said investigat­ors discovered 14 additional bodies Saturday, three days after the fire broke out. He said some of the victims were found in cars and in houses.

The fire injured an undisclose­d number of residents as well as three firefighte­rs. And Honea’s deputies were still looking into about 35 reports of missing people.

“This event was the worst-case scenario,” Honea said. “It’s the event that we have feared for a long time.”

Trump has loudly and consistent­ly blamed intensifyi­ng wildfires on poor resource management by California officials. In August, with fires growing to historic sizes in California, Trump tweeted that the state is “foolishly” diverting “vast amounts of water from the North,” blaming bad environmen­tal laws for the summer’s deadly fires.

Twice in October, Trump made similar threats because of what he alleged was poor forest management policy, The Washington Post’s Aaron Blake wrote.

Universall­y, California officials’ response has been that the real culprit behind intensifyi­ng wildfires is climate change.

As The Washington Post’s Angela Fritz wrote in July, a hotter-than average summer and dry winter have “led to tinder-dry vegetation,” in areas scorched by the Carr fire during Redding, California’s hottest July on record.

“The energy release component, or how much fuel is available for the fire, is at the highest it has been around Redding since at least 1979,” Fritz wrote.

In Southern California’s Ventura County, still reeling from a mass shooting that left 12 people dead, more wildfires had broken out, forcing 100,000 people in Thousand Oaks, Malibu and other areas to flee their homes. The Woolsey Fire had burned some 35,000 acres, officials said, while the nearby Hill Fire had burned through 6,000.

On Saturday, Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Chief John Benedict told The Associated Press that two people have been found dead in the fire zone of a Southern California blaze.

The deaths are the first from the pair of wildfires burning to the north and west of downtown Los Angeles.

But of all the areas struck by fires in the state so far, Paradise fared the worst. Its main commercial street transforme­d into a smoking runway of destructio­n. Officials said that 6,453 homes and 260 businesses were destroyed, making the fire the most destructiv­e in California’s history. The previous record holder, the Tubbs Fire in the state’s wine country, was just one year ago.

Marc Kessler, 55, a science teacher at a public middle school in Paradise, said the sky turned black soon after he arrived at work.

“It was raining black pieces of soot, coming down like a black snowstorm and starting fires everywhere,” he said in an interview. “Within minutes, the town was engulfed.”

Teachers were told by emergency workers to forgo seat-belt laws as they piled 200 or so students into their personal vehicles. Bus drivers drove through flames to help out, he said. One of his students pointed out what they thought was the moon in the darkened sky.

“I said, ‘That’s not the moon. That’s the sun,’ “he recalled, his voice cracking. “There were times when you couldn’t see through the smoke.”

The mayor of Paradise, Jody Jones, said most of the buildings in her town of 26,000 had been destroyed.

“There are very few homes still standing and we’ve been in multiple different neighborho­ods this afternoon,” Jones told CNN. “There’s really not much left.”

Paradise resident Brynn Chatfield posted a terrifying video as she and her family escaped the fire, flames a few feet from their vehicle and embers shooting across their path.

“Heavenly Father, please help us,” she prayed in the video. “Please help us to be safe.”

The video concluded as the vehicle emerged from the flames into a normal day. Chatfield later posted the video, which has since been seen nearly 2 million times.

“My hometown of Paradise is on fire,” she wrote. “My family is evacuated and safe. Not all my friends are safe.”

On Saturday, as some evacuation orders were lifted, people began returning to their neighborho­ods to see what was left.

Jeff McClenahan, 53, a college professor, returned Saturday to his home in Malibou Lake and found it destroyed, burned to the foundation Friday by the Woolsey Fire, which jumped Highway 101.

He stared, disbelievi­ng, then dropped to his knees, sobbing.

“On the one hand, it’s just crap,” he said. “It’s stuff. But it’s a lot of history. Everything, our whole lives were in here.”

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/AP ?? Krystin Harvey (left) comforts her daughter, Araya Cipollini, Saturday at the remains of their home burned in the Camp Fire in Paradise, Calif. The blaze has destroyed more than 6,700 buildings.
JOHN LOCHER/AP Krystin Harvey (left) comforts her daughter, Araya Cipollini, Saturday at the remains of their home burned in the Camp Fire in Paradise, Calif. The blaze has destroyed more than 6,700 buildings.
 ?? REED SAXON/AP ?? A child's toy stands outside a home destroyed by the Woolsey Fire in Malibu, as blazes ravaged Northern and Southern California.
REED SAXON/AP A child's toy stands outside a home destroyed by the Woolsey Fire in Malibu, as blazes ravaged Northern and Southern California.

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