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  • Los Angeles fire worsens, 10,000 homes threatened

    Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/compa...090830?sp=true

    UPDATE 2-Los Angeles wildfire forces thousands from homes
    Sun Aug 30, 2009 7:33pm EDT

    Los Angeles fire worsens, 10,000 homes threatened
    Sunday, 30 Aug 2009 12:04pm EDT


    * About 2,000 homes under mandatory evacuation orders

    * Governor Schwarzenegger says fire "out of control"

    * Fire 5 percent contained, 10,000 homes threatened

    * Fire threatens major communications facilities (Updates with quotes from residents, new numbers)

    By Mary Milliken

    LA CANADA FLINTRIDGE, Calif., Aug 30 (Reuters) - A wildfire in the heavily populated Los Angeles foothills threatened 10,000 homes on Sunday, and California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger warned residents to heed evacuation orders for the "out of control" and "very dangerous" blaze.

    The heat-driven fire nearly doubled in size overnight and has now burned 35,000 acres (14,000 hectares) of thick, bone-dry brush in the mountains above five towns, a 12-mile (19 km) stretch from La Crescenta to La Canada Flintridge, the California Fire Department said.

    Authorities have ordered residents to evacuate about 2,000 homes threatened by the fire about 15 miles (24 km) northeast of downtown Los Angeles.

    "These fires are still totally out of control," Schwarzenegger told reporters at the firefighters' command post in Lake View Terrace, California. "This is a huge and is a very dangerous fire. The fire is moving very close to homes and to structures... this is why it's important to pay close attention to the evacuation."

    In La Crescenta, the streets were deserted on Sunday afternoon except for a few residents fleeing with their suitcases and other belongings on foot.

    Bob Sebesta, 47, sat watching the burning ridge from his in-laws' house, which everyone evacuated last night with pictures, paperwork and "stuff you can't replace."

    "I keep thinking I should go water the backyard," Sebesta said.

    Three remote homes have been destroyed so far and some 10,000 others and 2,500 other buildings are in danger, as is Mount Wilson, the nexus for key telecommunications facilities.

    "That site is the nerve center for most of communication in the Los Angeles area," Station Fire Commander Mike Dietrich said. "It is not out of danger as we speak."

    Fire commanders said at a news briefing that more than three homes were lost in the Big Tujunga canyon, though they did not know the exact number.

    "We have eyewitness reports that our house is gone and as many as 30 may be lost," said Beth Halaas, who lives year-round in the canyon, where most homes are for weekend use.

    The fire that started on Wednesday above the exclusive community of La Canada Flintridge is only 5 percent contained and officials expected that, with hot temperatures and low humidity, it would grow larger. The cause of the fire is being investigated.

    HEALTH WARNINGS

    Dense smoke filled the skies over the foothills and authorities issued health warnings for the Los Angeles basin.

    The flames appeared to wane on Saturday evening in the area near NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory but raged at the other end and moved through the mountains toward the inland community of Acton, where evacuations were ordered on Sunday.

    A wooded neighborhood on the slopes of La Crescenta got the evacuation order in the middle of the night, but only around half the neighborhood left.

    On Sunday afternoon, brothers Vince and John Bollier looked out onto the mountains in front of their parents' house, where the fire had left only gray ash on the slopes.

    "Last night was an inferno," said Vince Bollier. "It was close but it wasn't life threatening, although a lot of people would have characterized it as dangerous."

    Sheriff's deputies spent Sunday afternoon urging residents to leave, and it appeared that most had.

    Helicopters have been flying over the neighborhood for days now, filling up with water to drop along the area where homes meet the bone dry wilderness.

    The saving grace in the Station fire has been the absence of high winds, but much of the brush in the area has not burned in 60 years, terrain is difficult to access and humidity is low. Winds were picking up on Sunday afternoon.

    Four firefighters have been injured and three civilians have suffered burns, including two who were badly burned on Saturday after they tried to ride out the fire by sitting in a hot tub.

    More than 2,000 firefighters and other personnel are on the ground but it is the aerial assault with water and retardant that has best kept the fire from moving into homes, many of them worth millions of dollars.

    The relative lack of high winds has made fighting the fires from the air difficult because thick smoke hanging over them made them hard to see, Schwarzenegger said, adding that many of the flames are up to 80 to 100 feet high (24 to 30 metres).

    Utility Southern California Edison (EIX.N) said the blaze has cut power to about 250 customers.

    The mayor of La Canada Flintridge, Laura Olhasso, said the situation was looking better for residents after firefighters beat back flames from backyards overnight, and evacuation orders were lifted for some residents on Sunday afternoon.

    Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency in Los Angeles County last week in response to four fires in the area.

    On Sunday, he said, there were eight "huge" fires burning statewide. In total, 55,000 acres (22,000 hectares) have burned, he said. (Additional reporting by Nichola Groom in Los Angeles; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

  • #2
    Re: Los Angeles fire worsens, 10,000 homes threatened

    Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lano...overnight.html

    Click here to find out more!
    L.A. Now
    Southern California -- this just in

    L.A. County fire grows overnight, causing more evacuations and destroying more homes
    August 31, 2009 | 5:29 am

    The massive Station fire, which has burned more than 42,000 acres and caused the deaths of two firefighters, grew overnight, and firefighters predicted another dangerous day.

    More neighborhoods were evacuated overnight as the fire pushed in three directions. Officials said the blaze had not yet burned to the top of Mt. Wilson, where critical communications centers are located, but they said that area remains highly vulnerable.

    The fire destroyed at least 18 structures in the Angeles National Forest, and officials said several homes were destroyed overnight south of Acton. They said the fire could double in size again today.

    "We are making progress. But it is very slow and very dangerous," said the L.A. County Fire Department's Mike Dietrich at a news conference this morning. "We have to wait for the fire to come to us."

    Protecting the TV and radio transmitters atop Mt. Wilson was a top priority overnight for firefighters.

    At the bottom of Mt. Wilson Road, firefighters bedded down in the ash-flecked open air, the forest pitch black except for the flames lighting ridgelines in the near distance. The head of the fire appeared to be across a broad and deep canyon from the Wilson compound.

    Smaller flareups could be seen closer to the thicket of communications towers alongside the observatory, where five engine crews were posted overnight.

    The blaze already had raced up to the winding stretch of Angeles Crest Highway that leads to the Wilson road, and the lanes remained barely passable in sections. Road signs had melted, guardrails were burned free of their wood moorings, and the switchbacks were choked with fire-loosened boulders and scorched tree limbs.

    Two firefighters were killed when they drove off the side of a treacherous road in the Mt. Gleason area, south of Acton, around 2:30 p.m., said Los Angeles County Deputy Fire Chief Mike Bryant. They were later identified as Arnaldo Quinones, 35, of Palmdale and Tedmund Hall, 47, of San Bernardino County.

    "This accident is tragic," Bryant said, choking up...

    ... as he spoke Sunday evening. "This is a very difficult time for L.A. County Fire Department and the men and women that serve day in, day out."

    More than 12,500 homes were threatened and 6,600 were under mandatory evacuation orders Sunday night. Eighteen residences have been destroyed, fire officials said, mostly in the Big Tujunga Canyon area.

    The fire was 5% contained, officials said, and at least temporarily had eased off in foothill communities from La Ca?ada Flintridge to Altadena.

    Much of Sunday turned into a blistering-hot waiting game for firefighters, who were trying to determine where the fire would move next. Rather than battling the flames in the sheer granite canyons of the interior, with heavy vegetation more than 40 years old in many areas, they cut fire lines near threatened neighborhoods.

    "In this rugged, steep terrain, with this brush as thick as it is, we are having difficulties establishing containment lines where we can make a stand," said Capt. Mark Savage, spokesman for the Los Angeles County Fire Department. "This fire is still very much out of control."

    Fire was burning all around Angeles Crest Highway near Mt. Wilson on Sunday evening. Earlier, hand crews cleared brush to protect the historic observatory and critical transmission towers for local television and radio stations.

    By 9 p.m. a strike team was positioned to protect the observatory and transmission towers, but the flames had not reached the site at the top of the 5,710-foot peak above Pasadena.

    Standing at the base of Mt. Wilson Road, U.S. Forest Service Fuels Battalion Chief Larry Peabody said five fire engines would be at the peak throughout the night. "Their mission is to defend the antennas, the observatory and the buildings," he said Sunday night.

    The century-old observatory holds what was for decades the largest telescope in the world; it was instrumental in many of astronomy's biggest discoveries, including research that led to the Big Bang Theory.

    "It's a serious situation. Is the observatory going to make it? We're doing everything in our power. But I wouldn't be surprised if it is impacted by fire today or tomorrow," Bob Shindelar, operations branch director of California Incident Management Team 5, said Sunday afternoon.

    More than 2,800 fire personnel from around the state have converged to battle the Station fire, along with 12 helicopters and eight air tankers.

    They had hoped that the day would bring cooler, more humid air. But the red-flag fire alert was extended through today, as the fire grew in all directions and sent a column of smoke high into the air -- mushrooming into a towering pyrocumulus cloud that could be seen across the Southland.

    Meteorologists predicted that hot, dry conditions would continue without relent until at least Tuesday.

    --Paul Pringle at Mt. Wilson and Hector Becerra at Hansen Dam

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Los Angeles fire worsens, 10,000 homes threatened

      Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lano...f-control.html

      L.A. County fire has destroyed 74 structures, remains out of control
      August 31, 2009 | 6:30 pm

      The number of structures burned by the Station fire has surged to 74 as the out-of-control wildfire pushed west and north, officials say.


      Fifty-three homes, mountain cabins and other buildings were destroyed when the fire swept through the hamlet of Stonyvale in Tujunga Canyon. Earlier officials had said 21 homes were lost, mostly in remote areas in Tujunga Canyon and south of Acton.

      The fire showed little sign of slowing down this afternoon as it threatened 12,000 homes in suburban tracts and desert communities, along with a historic observatory and major array of television and radio transmission towers.
      ?The fire is headed just about anywhere it wants to,? L.A. County Fire Deputy Chief Mike Dietrich said. ?This is a very angry fire. Until we get a change in the weather conditions, I am not overly optimistic.?

      With afternoon winds picking up, the Station fire, the largest of eight burning in the state, was plowing through dense hillside vegetation and steep terrain toward residential areas of Sunland and Santa Clarita on the west.


      As billows of white and black smoke danced ominously close, Chuck Horn ushered his family and his two prized collectors' automobiles out of his home in the Sunland-Tujunga area.

      "We took pictures, tax returns, insurance forms, the dog, the chicken, and that's it," Horn, 61, a retired L.A. County public works employee, said as he prepared to drive away in his baby blue 1931 Plymouth three-window coupe. Horn was next planning on moving his black 1911 Buick Model 33 away from the blaze.

      To the east, firefighters were hoping that a concerted effort to cut fire breaks and lay down fire retardant would save the Mt. Wilson Observatory and a key complex of communications towers.

      Because of the intensity and unpredictability of the blaze, which continued shifting directions, fire crews had to pull out of the mountaintop area today and wait for the firestorm to pass.
      By 3 p.m. the southeastern edge of the Station fire had pushed south against the wind, into the upper west fork of the San Gabriel River drainage. This fire was near the base of Mt. Wilson?s north side. Firefighters had begun back-burning brush at the juncture of California 2 and Mt. Wilson Road in order to protect structures, including an American Indian cultural center, from the advancing fire.

      The drama of families having to flee their homes -- or risking all to try and defend their property -- played out repeatedly as searing heat and a generation of accumulated hillside growth fed the fires. In Gold Canyon, authorities scrambled to rescue five people who had refused to evacuate.

      A Los Angeles County Sheriff?s helicopter was trying to locate the residents near Little Tujunga Road. They pleaded for help after becoming trapped by back fires set by crews trying to fight the blaze.


      Sixty-five firefighters withdrew from Chilao Flats near the Chilao ranger station. "The intensity of the fire was too strong," said L.A. County Fire Capt. Henry Rodriguez. "They were pulled off the lines and drove away in their vehicles. They're safe and all OK."

      Another fire in San Bernardino County was spreading completely out of control and threatening 2,000 homes near Yucaipa.


      -- Rich Connell and Corina Knoll

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Los Angeles fire worsens, 10,000 homes threatened

        Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...4337.htmlstory

        Quantcast

        Interactive map
        Los Angeles fire map: Tujunga, Mt. Wilson, Glendale, La Crescenta, Acton
        8:05 p.m., 8/31/09: With afternoon winds picking up, the fire is moving west toward residential areas of Sunland and Santa Clarita. To the east, firefighters were hoping that fire breaks and fire retardant would save the Mt. Wilson Observatory and a key complex of communications towers. For details, click on map. Or click here for a map with legend.

        Quantcast

        Interactive map
        Los Angeles fire map: Tujunga, Mt. Wilson, Glendale, La Crescenta, Acton
        8:05 p.m., 8/31/09: With afternoon winds picking up, the fire is moving west toward residential areas of Sunland and Santa Clarita. To the east, firefighters were hoping that fire breaks and fire retardant would save the Mt. Wilson Observatory and a key complex of communications towers. For details, click on map. Or click here for a map with legend.

        Rong-Gong Lin II Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

        August 31, 2009

        View Los Angeles County fires north of La Canada Flintridge, Altadena in a larger map

        Rong-Gong Lin II Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
        August 31, 2009

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Los Angeles fire worsens, 10,000 homes threatened

          The terrain is pretty steep around Mt Wilson observatory area. I have hiked it some time ago and various areas around it. The front range of the san gabriels climbs pretty steeply above Pasadena/ Altadena and also above Sierra Madre. There are steep rocky slopes and granite cliffs/gorges in that area, making firefighting that terrain a tough task, but there are lots of fire roads running all over the region which will be critical in protecting the com towers and observatory atop Mt Wilson.
          Further to the west the terrain is gentler and less rugged but more drier and brushier as u come down to the 210 fwy, which would i imagine would be a big firebreak to keep the fire jumping and spreading down into the spread out but populated rustic ranch communites of Sunland and Tijunga, thought it may have leaped that big freeway barrier already.
          The goal is to push the fire to the north and east away from the foothill communities of la Canada, flintridge, Sunland Tijunga, lake view terrace and move it toward the lightly poplulated mts/desert regions centered around Acton.
          There has been a trend in last 4-7 yrs for developers to put up more new homes and tracts deep into the mts ringing the LA coastal basin. This will have severe consequenses as the fire season will be bad this year and we haven't see ther worst of it. To have this bad of a fiire this early on in the year is a very ominous sign.
          Any folks building or buying homes deep in the fireprone LA mts should realize they are putting the lives of firefighters on the line to protect their homes in the mts. If they tell u to get out then get out and don't put firefighters in jeopardy by foolishly staying in your homes as the fire nears. Already two firefighters have died and many more will be severly injured or suffer permanent disabilities from this Mega- Fire which appears to be consuming a third of the San Gabriel Mts.

          Comment

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