California
fires: 16 killed and 10,000 structures destroyed as blazes continue
Strong winds
and low humidity continue as five fires rage across Los Angeles area, with
death toll expected to rise
Oliver
Holmes, Dani Anguiano, Gabrielle Canon, Lois Beckett and Robert Mackey
Sun 12 Jan
2025 03.11 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/10/fast-dry-winds-california-wildfires
Weather
forecasters in Los Angeles were expecting fast, dry winds to return towards the
end of the weekend, threatening to fuel wildfires that have already destroyed
10,000 structures and killed 16 people.
Urgent “red
flag” alerts – meaning critical fire weather conditions – announced by the US
National Weather Service (NWS) said moderate to strong wind and low humidity
would continue on Friday morning, as five fires raged across the metropolis.
Barbara
Bruderlin, head of the Malibu Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce, described
the impact of the fires as “total devastation and loss”.
“There are
areas where everything is gone. There isn’t even a stick of wood left. It’s
just dirt,” Bruderlin said.
Los Angeles
mayor Karen Bass has come under intense criticism for her absence from the city
during the first 24 hours of the crisis, when she was in Ghana, as part of an
official White House delegation for the inauguration of that country’s
president. She was assailed by political rivals on the right, including Rick
Caruso, who ran against Bass in the 2022 mayoral election, but also faced
criticism from left, which accused the mayor of cutting the budget for
firefighting to pay for increased policing.
“The
consistent defunding of other city programs in order to give the LAPD billions
a year has consequences,” Ricci Sergienko, a lawyer and organizer with People’s
City Council LA, told the Intercept. “The city is unprepared to handle this
fire, and Los Angeles shouldn’t be in that position.”
In an
interview with Fox LA, Los Angeles fire chief Kristin Crowley said that a cut
of $17m in funding for her department, and problems with the water supply to
hydrants in the Palisades, had undercut firefighters’ abilities to respond to
the fires.
“My message
is the fire department needs to be properly funded,” Crowley said. “It’s not.”
Fox LA reporter Gigi Graciette then asked Crowley three times: “Did the city of
Los Angeles fail you?” After the third time, Crowley responded simply: “Yes.”
One public
official who has chosen not to criticize Bass during the crisis is Los Angeles
city controller Kenneth Mejia, whose office drew attention to cuts to the
firefighting budget in October in a widely circulated chart showing a massive
increase in spending on the police department and cuts to other public services
including the fire department.
As his work
was being cited by critics of the mayor, Mejia, an activist accountant, wrote
in a social media post: “As the City’s Accountant, we enact the budget, account
for your taxes, & know the details of the City’s finances. We will gladly
break down any questions about how all this works. BUT for now, we must focus
on ensuring we can get through these catastrophic fires.”
Officials
estimate the Palisades fire wiped away at least 5,000 structures, including
many homes in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood, where mansions lining the
yellow beaches were hollowed out and homes in the neighborhoods’ canyons
reduced to dust.
Further east
near Altadena, the streets, too, were littered with fallen branches while
entire blocks of homes are simply gone. In some areas, the destruction appeared
almost random, one resident said, with one house leveled while a neighboring
still stood.
The dead
include four men who were unable to leave or had stayed behind to defend their
homes in Altadena, a community near Pasadena that is home to working- and
middle-class families, including many Black residents living there for
generations. Two of them were Anthony Mitchell, a 67-year-old amputee, and his
son, Justin, who had cerebral palsy. They were waiting for an ambulance to come
when the flames roared through, Mitchell’s daughter, Hajime White, told the
Washington Post.
“He was not
going to leave his son behind. No matter what,” White said. White – who lives
in Warren, Arkansas, and is Justin’s step-sister – said her father called her
on Wednesday morning and said they had to evacuate from approaching flames.
“Then he said: ‘I’ve got to go – the fire’s in the yard,’” she said.
In another
incident, Shari Shaw told the local media outlet KTLA that she tried to get her
66-year-old brother, Victor Shaw, to evacuate but he wanted to stay and fight
the fire. His body was found with a garden hose in his hand.
Rodney
Nickerson died in his bed in his Altadena home. The 82-year-old had lived
through numerous fires and felt that he would be OK waiting it out at home, his
daughter, Kimiko Nickerson, told KTLA.
Briana
Navarro, who lived in Altadena with her grandmother, Erliene Kelley, told NBC
News that Kelley had died there after deciding not to evacuate the home she had
lived in for more than 40 years with the rest of the family. “We made the
choice to evacuate on Tuesday night, however my grandmother decided she wanted
to stay”, Navarro wrote in a GoFundMe post. “After we left, I asked my dad to
go to the house to check on her … and again, she said she was going to stay at
home. She said ‘It’s in God’s hands.’”
CNN reported
that Annette Rossilli, who was 85, died in the Palisades fire after refusing to
leave her home and pets, according to Luxe Homecare, a company that provided
in-home care to her three times a week.
Officials
have said they expect the death toll to rise.
Winds were
likely to diminish on Friday afternoon, the NWS said, but warned that an
“extended period of elevated to potentially critical fire weather conditions
are in the forecast for Sunday through Wednesday”.
While the
cause of the fires has yet to be determined, the New York Times reported that
power lines near the Eaton and Palisades fires had not been turned off before
those blazes started, “which energy experts said was concerning because
electrical equipment has often ignited infernos during periods of high wind in
California and elsewhere”.
Officials
said on Friday afternoon that they had some success in battling the Kenneth
fire, which ignited on Thursday and grew to 1,000 acres. About 400 firefighters
remained at the location overnight to guard against the fire spreading, and it
was about 50% contained by Friday.
Firefighting
efforts in such tough conditions, with effectively no rain for months and none
forecast in the days ahead, have stretched crews and left the country’s
second-largest city reeling.
The largest
of the fires burning in the LA area, the Palisades fire, obliterated
neighbourhoods in the scenic hilltops. According to the California Department
of Forestry and Fire Protection website, that blaze has burned over 21,300
acres and been only 8% “contained”.
Containment,
according to the Western Fire Chiefs Association, refers to a “control line”
around a portion of the fire that flames should not be able to cross. So if a
wildfire is described as 25% contained, then firefighters have created control
lines – usually wide trenches – around 25% of the fire’s perimeter. Once a fire
is 100% contained, firefighters can begin extinguishing it.
To the east,
the Eaton fire near Pasadena has burned more than 5,000 structures – a term
that includes homes, apartment buildings, businesses, outbuildings and vehicles
– across nearly 14,000 acres, and is just 3% contained.
The Hurst
fire in the hills above Sylmar, which threatened the San Fernando Valley, was
about 37% contained on Friday morning and firefighters reported that they had
“successfully contained the fire north of the I-210 Foothill Freeway,
establishing control lines”.
The Los
Angeles fire department lifted an evacuation order in Granada Hills, north-west
of downtown Los Angeles, on Friday afternoon, after “firefighters combined with
the aggressive attack by LAFD air ops” swiftly brought the Archer fire, which
broke out on Friday morning, under control before any structures were damaged.
Human-caused
climate breakdown is supercharging extreme weather across the world, including
wildfires. In California, the fire season now begins earlier and ends later.
More than
150,000 people remained under evacuation orders, and the fires have consumed
about 57 sq miles, an area larger than the city of San Francisco.
At least 20
arrests have been made for looting. Officials have imposed a mandatory curfew
in evacuation zones as well as in the city of Santa Monica, which is next to
Pacific Palisades.
The
Associated Press contributed reporting
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