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Fast-spreading California blaze prompts evacuation
Fast-spreading California blaze prompts evacuation
July 07, 2018 | 11:22 PM
Santa Barbara County officials declared a local emergency yesterday morning as a fast-moving wildfire driven by strong winds and high temperatures tore through homes and forced 3,200 residents to evacuate.The Holiday Fire, one of more than three dozen in western US states, broke out near the beach community of Goleta, California, on Friday night before charring dried vegetation in the foothills south of the Los Padres National Forest.Some 350 firefighters were taking advantage of a period of light winds early yesterday to contain as much as possible of the blaze, which has burned through 50 to 80 acres and damaged or destroyed 20 buildings, fire officials said.“It was a small fire but it had a powerful punch to it,” Santa County Fire spokesman Mike Eliason said by telephone. “We’re going to hit it hard today.”Winds are likely to pick up again as temperatures rise in the afternoon, Eliason said. So far, firefighters have set up containment lines around just 5% of the blaze, he said.Besides the evacuations, officials said the fire left 2,000 people without power, adding that the emergency declaration will help the county get additional firefighting resources.Dozens of fires have broken out across the western United States, fanned by scorching heat, winds and low humidity.The first death attributed to them was announced on Friday, when the remains of an unidentified person were found in a home burned to the ground by the Klamathon fire, which broke out on Thursday near California’s border with Oregon.This year’s fires had burned more than 2.9mn acres through Friday, compared with an annual average of about 2.4mn over the last 10 years, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.Among the biggest is the County Fire that has charred 88,375 acres in sparsely populated wooded areas of California’s Napa and Yolo Counties and is 48% contained, the California Fire authority said yesterday.Some 3,660 firefighters faced with inaccessible terrain, high temperatures and low humidity, were battling the fire, which has destroyed 10 structures, damaged two and threatened 110, it said.In Colorado, a fire crew of 1,444, aided by local rains and higher humidity on Friday, continued to battle the Spring Creek fire north of the Arizona border, which has consumed 105,704 acres and is 35 % contained, local officials said.
July 07, 2018 | 11:22 PM