California Turns Corner on Wildfires
US: October 26, 2007
SAN DIEGO - Firefighters gained the upper hand on nearly all of the
California wildfires Thursday as winds died down after five days battling 20
fires from the mountains north of Los Angeles down to the Mexican border.
Most of the 500,000 people in the largest evacuation in California's modern
history were on their way home, officials said. Some 1,600 homes have been
destroyed since Sunday.
Two burned bodies were found in a house in hard-hit San Diego County,
bringing the death toll to at least eight. Most were elderly who died while
being evacuated.
"This is a better day than any we've had since this thing started," San
Diego County Sheriff Bill Kolender said.
President Bush, who declared California's wildfires a "major disaster," was
due to survey the damage with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger Thursday and check
on the government's response.
"It's a sad situation out there in southern California. I fully understand
that the people have got a lot of anguish in their hearts and they just need
to know a lot of folks care about them," Bush said before leaving the White
House.
He said he wanted to make sure California was receiving the help it needed
to deal with the wildfires.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency, criticized along with Bush for a
slow response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, had 1,000 people on the ground
in badly scorched San Diego County.
Though fire officials were relieved that the hot, dry Santa Ana winds
driving the flames had weakened, they conceded that offshore breezes
replacing them presented a danger. Even those milder winds could fan the
flames, being fought by some 9,000 weary men and women.
The wildfires broke out during the weekend after the Santa Ana winds began
to blow and have blackened nearly 800 square miles, and injured more than 60
people, many of them firefighters.
'RE-ENTRY DAY'
San Diego County has suffered losses in excess of US$1 billion, and three of
the largest fires were still burning there, mostly in the eastern, less
populated part of the county.
"This is going to be a re-entry day for many of the thousands of San Diegans
that are out there," said Ron Lane, head of county emergency services. "We
are absolutely thrilled."
Fewer than 1,000 people spent the night at San Diego's Qualcomm Stadium,
compared with some 10,000 on Monday and Tuesday. The good food, showers,
acupuncture and massage at evacuees' disposal might have attracted
chronically homeless street people.
"You see a lot of them walking around the parking lot," evacuee Jennifer
Ryan said. "They know a good thing when they see it."
One of the most critical fires was in Orange County, south of Los Angeles,
where containment of the 20,000-acre Santiago fire suffered a setback
overnight.
Authorities said federal agents from the FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms joined local authorities in investigating the Santiago fire as
arson.
"Those are crime scenes," said Jim Amormino, spokesman for the Orange County
Sheriff's Department. He said a US$70,000 reward was posted for information
leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible.
Three out of four of Los Angeles County's fires had 100 percent containment,
including one in the celebrity enclave of Malibu that garnered much
attention in the first days.
A risk modeling firm said insured fire losses from the fires would likely
cost between US$900 million and US$1.6 billion.
Story by Adam Tanner
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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