Southern California three wildfires fatalities confirmed
The first fire-related fatality from a series of wildfires
that have covered Southern California in smoke and ash was confirmed Friday,
authorities said.
Virginia Pesola, 70, of Santa Paula, was found dead in a car
that had been involved in a crash along an evacuation route in a burn area of
the Thomas fire in Ventura County on Wednesday night.
According to the county
medical examiner, Pesola’s cause of death was blunt force trauma with terminal
smoke inhalation and thermal injuries.
“The death involved a traffic incident during active fire
evacuation,” the medical examiner wrote in a news release. She had been
reporting missing after the evacuation.
Pesola was a victim of the Thomas fire, a 143,000-acre
monster blaze that started about 6:30 p.m. Monday and raced across Ventura
County mountains and foothills as hurricane-force wind gusts steered the
flames.
Bill Murphy, a public information officer with the
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said firefighters had a
successful day fighting flames on the southern edge toward the coast as well
parts of Ojai thanks to favorable wind patterns, weakened Santa Ana winds and
improved fire lines established by crews.
By Friday evening, the Thomas fire was at 10% containment.
As a result, Murphy said evacuations for most of the city of Ventura and Santa
Paula were lifted. Firefighters continued to encounter difficulty on the east
side of the blaze above Fillmore.
Firefighters used helicopters to drop water in that portion
to try to contain the fire.
The Thomas fire is one of six blazes in Los Angeles, San
Diego and Ventura counties destroyed more than 500 structures, sent 212,000
people fleeing and left thousands without power.
In northern San Diego County, the Lilac fire continued to
burn Friday morning, holding at 4,100 acres from the night before with no
containment. More than 1,000 firefighters were battling the blaze, which roared
through Bonsall and into Oceanside late Thursday.
At least three people were injured and 25 horses were killed
at a thoroughbred training center. At least 85 structures have been
destroyed, including a number of mobile homes, authorities said Friday.
President Trump approved a California disaster declaration
Friday morning. He ordered federal aid to the area and put the Department of
Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency in charge of
disaster relief efforts.
Of all the fires in Southern California, the Thomas fire is
still the largest, spanning from Santa Paula to the coast. It was 10% contained
as of Friday morning, authorities said.
The blaze approached Santa Barbara County triggering that
county’s emergency operations center to activate.
Smoke from the Thomas fire reduced visibility at times from
a mile to less than half a mile in Ventura on Friday morning.
The winds Thursday night were “down into the teens and 20s
as opposed to previous nights we had winds in the 30 and 40 mph” range, said
Ventura County Fire Capt. Scott Dettorre. Throughout Ventura County, more than 400 structures have
been destroyed, most in the city of Ventura, authorities said. At a morning briefing Friday, crews battling the Thomas fire
were reminded to be sensitive of residents who were returning to destroyed
homes.
At the Casitas Shopping Center in Carpinteria, just above
the Santa Barbara County line, more than 100 people stood in a line that
stretched from Albertsons to a corner doughnut shop, and waited to collect
masks. Organizers said they have 3,000 masks they plan to hand out, for both
adults and children.
By midnight Thursday, San Diego County officials confirmed
that they had called more than 100,000 phone numbers to issue evacuation orders
or warnings through AlertSanDiego, a regional notification system.
At least 20,000 in San Diego County were without power as of
10 a.m. Friday morning, said Jacob, the county supervisor. As of about 12:30 a.m. Friday, approximately 578 people had
checked into evacuations centers, a county spokeswoman said. At the Rancho Monserate Country Club in Fallbrook, a swath
of upscale mobile homes bordering a golf course already had been reduced to ash
and twisted metal.
In Los Angeles County, firefighters on Thursday night took
advantage of the calmest winds they had seen in days. The 15,323-acre Creek fire near Sylmar was 40% contained as
of Friday morning, and no more structures were threatened, authorities said.
At least 63 homes and other structures have been destroyed
and an additional 45 damaged, though officials expect that number to increase
as damage assessment crews continue to survey the area, said L.A. City Fire
Capt. Branden Silverman. As of 4 p.m. Thursday, residents were allowed back into
their neighborhoods, except Limekiln Canyon, Silverman said.
The Skirball fire in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Bel-Air
was 30% contained and at 475 acres as of Friday morning. Six houses have been
destroyed and a dozen damaged in the fire, authorities said. Some residents
have been allowed back into their homes.
On Thursday night and Friday morning, “they had flare-ups
here and there … but they were able to quickly extinguish them and knock those
down,” said Los Angeles City Fire Capt. Cody Weireter.
As of Friday morning, the Liberty fire in Murrieta was at
300 acres and 60% contained. One structure and seven outbuildings were
destroyed, authorities said.
On Friday morning, Southern California Edison said that more
than 11,000 of its customers were without power because of fires throughout the
region.
The dry, gusty winds that have fanned a half-dozen wildfires
in Southern California will continue through next week, the National Weather
Service said.
A red flag warning a combination of extremely low relative
humidity and wind speeds that indicate a serious threat if a fire were to occur
are in effect through 8 p.m. Sunday, said meteorologist Tom Fisher.
“Monday and Tuesday, things should be kind of dull,
fortunately,” Fisher said. The wind speeds expected Friday are a far cry from
the hurricane-force gusts that drove a wall of fire into Ventura on Monday
evening and downslope toward hundreds of thousands of residents in Los Angeles
County the following morning.
According to forecasters, 25 to 35 mph winds in Ventura
County around the Thomas fire will continue to push the fire south and
southwest, with occasional 45 mph gusts.
Winds are forecast to be even calmer inland, where they will
move at 15 to 25 mph, with 35 mph gusts in the San Gabriel Valley, Fisher said.
Farther south in Orange, Riverside and San Diego counties,
winds on Friday had slowed tremendously from Monday and Tuesday, when gusts
clocked in at more than 80 mph. Winds were down to between 30 and 50 mph for
cities between Riverside and Palomar.
source: LA times
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