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Thursday, October 25, 2007
California Crews Aided by Easing Winds; Six Major Fires Still Burning
Oct 25, 2007
California Crews Aided by Easing Winds, but Six Major Fires Still
Blazing
A Merciful Easing of Winds Helps Calif. Firefighters
Battle Back Against Sprawling Wildfires
SOCAL: A merciful easing of the winds fueling Southern California's
sprawling wildfires finally gave fire crews a chance to fight back
against some blazes Wednesday, and weary residents could take solace in
an overriding sign of hope: Just one person has died from the flames.
That contrasts to 22 dead from a fire of similar magnitude in 2003. And while the final toll has yet to be tallied from this week's fires, officials were crediting an automated, reverse 911 calling system that prompted the orderly evacuation of more than half a million people 10 times the number evacuated four years ago.
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"They are more determined that people leave," said Steve Levstik, who got his call 15 minutes before flames swept through his Rancho Bernardo neighborhood.
"It was very intense. On the call, it was like, 'This area, go! This area, go!' In 2003 there was less guidance. It was like, 'Just pay attention to the news and if it looks bad, leave.'"
On Wednesday, winds dropped to 21 to 36 mph, considerably less than the fierce gusts of up to 100 mph that whipped fire zones earlier in the week.
The improving weather allowed for a greater aerial assault on the flames and helped firefighters beat back the most destructive blazes. Helicopters and air tankers dropped 30 to 35 loads of water on two fires that have burned hundreds of homes in the San Bernardino Mountains, near Lake Arrowhead.
"They're taking it down considerably," said Dennis Bouslaugh of the U.S. Forest Service.
Firefighters had fully contained the three major fires in Los Angeles County by nightfall, and largely contained several smaller fires north of San Diego, though large fires were still burning almost unchecked.
Despite the progress, none of the six major blazes in San Diego County was more than 15 percent contained, and those fires threatened more than 8,500 houses. The top priority was a fire in San Bernardino County that threatened 6,000 homes and continued to rage out of control... Continues/Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=3772572
Edited on: Thursday, October 25, 2007 13:56.45
Categories: Emergency Services