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SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S WILDFIRES
NEWS UPDATES AND PHOTOS AND MORN

California fires may be at turning point mabe october.25.2007
SAN DIEGO - Flames drew perilously close toward thousands of homes in Southern California's firestorm Thursday, despite a break in the harsh winds and a massive aerial assault that raised evacuees' hopes of going home for good. The hot, dry Santa Ana winds that have whipped the blazes into a destructive, indiscriminate fury since the weekend were expected to all but disappear Thursday. "That will certainly aid in firefighting efforts," National Weather Service meteorologist Jamie Meier said. The record high temperatures of recent days began succumbing to cooling sea breezes, and two fires that burned 21 homes in northern Los Angeles County were fully contained. Electricity was another concern that was quickly emerging as the fires raged. A wildfire cut a main power link with Arizona, while another blaze near Camp Pendleton was threatening the main north-south power corridor that connects San Diego with the rest of California. Additional power was being shipped from Mexico, said Sempra Utilities Chief Operating Officer Michael Niggli. About 19,500 customers were without power Wednesday either because of downed lines or to ensure the safety of firefighters, officials said. Even with the slackening winds, the county remains a tinderbox. Firefighters cut fire lines around the major blazes in San Diego County, but none of the four fires was more than 40 percent contained. More than 8,500 homes were still threatened. Towns scattered throughout the county remained on the edge of disaster, including the apple-picking region around Julian, where dozens of homes burned in 2003. To the northeast, in the San Bernardino County mountain resort of Lake Arrowhead, fire officials said 6,000 homes remained in the path of two wildfires that had destroyed more than 300 homes. Both fires remained out of control, but were being bombarded by aerial tankers and helicopters that dumped more than 30 loads of water. President Bush, who has declared a major disaster in a seven-county region, was scheduled to arrive in California Thursday and to take an aerial tour of the burn areas, accompanied by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. "It's a sad situation out there in Southern California," Bush said outside the White House before leaving for California. "I fully understand that the people have got a lot of anguish in their hearts. They just need to know a lot of folks care about them." Losses total at least $1 billion in San Diego County alone, and include a third of the state's avocado crop. The losses are half as high as those in Southern California's 2003 fires, but are certain to rise. The more hopeful news on the fire lines came a day after residents in some hard-hit San Diego County neighborhoods were allowed back to their streets, many lined with the wreckage of melted cars. In upscale Rancho Bernardo, house after house had been reduced to a smoldering heap. Cheryl Monticello, 38 and eight months pregnant, knew what she would find when she came back Wednesday because a city official warned her the house was lost. But she had to see it for herself. "You really need to see it to know for sure," Monticello said. Only the white brick chimney and her daughter's backyard slide had survived the inferno that bore down on her neighborhood Monday morning. Running Springs resident Ricky Garcia returned to his house in the San Bernardino Mountains on Wednesday, panicked that his street had been wiped out and his cats, Jeff and Viper, were lost. But his house, a newly built on a cleared lot, was unscathed, unlike those of his neighbors. Hiding underneath a porch and mewing loudly was Jeff, his long, black hair gray with ash. Viper was nowhere in sight. "I'm excited to see my cat and my house, but absolutely devastated for my neighbors," he said, preparing to evacuate again. As nature's blitzkrieg starts to recede, many of the other refugees will be allowed back to their neighborhoods. More than 500,000 people were evacuated in San Diego County alone, part of the largest mass evacuation in California history. So far, at least 15 fires have destroyed about 1,500 homes since they began late Saturday. The burn area of nearly 460,000 acres about 719 square miles stretches in a broad arc from Ventura County north of Los Angeles east to the San Bernardino National Forest and south to the U.S. Mexico border. In the middle of that arc, the Santiago Fire in Orange County had burned nearly 20,000 acres and destroyed nine homes. Only 50 percent contained,
Calif. fire crews aided by easing winds OCTOBER.24.2007
SAN DIEGO - 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."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. So far, this week's fires have destroyed about 1,500 homes and burned more than 700 square miles across five counties, from Ventura in the north all the way into Mexico. The state Office of Emergency Services said 28,000 homes were still threatened. Property damage has reached at least $1 billion in San Diego County alone, and President Bush signed a major disaster declaration for California. The president was scheduled to visit the region Thursday. The death toll from the most recent blazes may rise as fires continue to burn and authorities return to neighborhoods where homes turned to piles of ash, but displaced homeowners and authorities were relieved that early reports were so low. The San Diego County medical examiner officially listed six deaths connected to the blazes, but he included five who died during the evacuation who were not directly killed by the fire. In 2003, all but a handful of the 22 dead succumbed to the flames. Terry Dooley, who was ordered out of his home with his wife and three sons Monday, said authorities learned important lessons from Hurricane Katrina and the 2003 California fires that wiped out 3,640 homes and blackened 750,000 acres during a two-week period." They learned how to get things done more quickly," Dooley said as he waited at a roadblock Wednesday to return home to San Diego's upscale, densely populated Rancho Bernardo area. In addition to the reverse-911 system, authorities shut down schools, halted mail delivery and urged people to stay home and off the roads if they were not in danger. Another factor separating these fire from other disasters has been wealth. Unlike many of the poor neighborhoods flooded by Hurricane Katrina, the hardest-hit areas in California were filled with upscale homes, with easy access to wide streets. Less wealthy areas including rural enclaves and horse farms that stretch through the mountains east of San Diego benefited from easy road access and small crowds. On Wednesday, about two dozen people gathered at a police barricade in Rancho Bernardo, which was one of the hardest-hit areas, hoping to retrieve medications and belongings or simply to see if their homes were intact. What awaited many was an apocalyptic scene: entire streets leveled, cars reduced to charred hulks of metal, homes with only chimneys left standing. House after house, 29 on one street alone, were reduced to piles of blackened concrete, twisted metal and white ash. At one point, police officers lifted a barricade into the neighborhood only to turn residents away several hundred yards down the road at a second barricade. Some of the homeowners cursed at the officers. "You let us in just to send us back out," one angry man yelled from his car. Dooley knew his home was OK because his home answering machine still worked. Six of San Diego County's 42 evacuation centers were full Wednesday but there was plenty of space at Qualcomm Stadium, home to the NFL Chargers, where 10,000 people sought refuge. People rested on cots that lined covered walkways circling the bleachers and quietly watched television as National Guard troops watched. There were no bathroom lines. Some displaced homeowners complained that the evacuations went too far. Ron Morris, 68, saw smoke but no flames when he was ordered to leave a motor home park in Ramona, northeast of San Diego, Sunday night. He drove his recreational vehicle to Qualcomm Stadium's parking lot. "It's good that everyone got out, but they did it too early in my opinion." he said. Authorities made no apologies. "One happy consequence" of the 2003 fires is that people remember that fire can be very unpredictable, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chert off said. "All but the most unlucky people can see the fire coming," he said. "There's no reason you should have loss of life, certainly for civilians." The causes of many fires remained under investigation. A 30-square-mile Orange County fire that destroyed nine homes was believed to be arson because authorities found three different ignition points within a short distance. In San Bernardino County, a motorcyclist who authorities say set a small fire in a rural foothill area of the San Bernardino Mountains has been booked for investigation of arson, but investigators said they didn't know whether he was connected to any of the larger fires. In the city of San Bernardino, police said they shot and killed a man who fled Tuesday night when officers approached to see if he might be trying to set a fire. After a chase, the man, whose name was not released, backed his car into a police cruiser and an officer opened fire, police said. The only confirmed death from the flames was Thomas Varshock, 52, of Tecate, a town on the U.S. side of the border southeast of San Diego. He was ordered to evacuate, but he didn't leave and authorities left him to take care of other evacuations. Al Guerin, a San Diego County assistant sheriff, estimated only 100 to 200 people ignored evacuation orders. That included 20 people in the rural community of Jamul, near the Mexican border. Firefighters returned to save them. Homeowners who stayed behind knew firefighters were overwhelmed and figured their lives were safe, Guerin said. "They say, 'Yeah, OK,' and then they call you later and say 'Help! Help! Help!'" he said. Despite road blocks in the San Bernardino mountains, east of Los Angeles, some stayed behind. "They don't want to lose their stuff," said Running springs resident Don Rice. "And they get overconfident. We've all made it through a lot of fires."
Some Calif. survivors return to rubble OCTOBER.24.2007
SAN DIEGO - Patty Thompson's mouth was dry, her hands shaking, as she stepped out of her car in front of the hulking, blackened piles of concrete and twisted metal that were once her home. Days earlier, she had barely escaped in the pre-dawn hours from flames advancing on her Rancho Bernardo home flames that licked at her feet and burned her robe. On Wednesday, Thompson, like thousands throughout San Diego County, returned home after mandatory evacuation orders were lifted in various communities Some found their homes just as they left them, except for a fine layer of soot and the heavy smell of smoke. Others, like Thompson, were left with nothing but a memory."I'm just sick to my stomach," said Thompson, 50, as she surveyed the remnants of a home that had a view of the valley and the mountains beyond.She had known for a few days her house had been burned her brother-in-law, a police officer, had taken pictures. But she talked as if it still stood: "It has a pool. It has a deck. It has a screened-in patio." Reality settled in as she dug through the rubble, recovering several blue and white porcelain tea saucers, three white teacups and saucers and a delicate butterfly-shaped candy dish from the remains of her kitchen. She carefully stacked them on the concrete .Just like Thompson, Cheryl Monticello fled her Rancho Bernardo home in advance of the fire. And just like Thompson, she knows her home burned. Eight months pregnant, Monticello fled with her toddler daughter and her husband Monday after a neighbor called to warn of approaching flames.She watched television footage of fire chewing through her block, eating houses one after another. On Wednesday, she was still waiting to see her home for herself after she saw addresses of destroyed homes scrolling on TV.The fire wreaked havoc on the Monticello's block, carving an unpredictable path of destruction that burned one home and left another standing before burning three more homes.The only thing left standing of the Monticello house is a white brick chimney. "It's the one thing we never used," she says. The Monticellos tried to get back into their neighborhood with their insurance claims adjuster but were turned away by police, who refused to make any exception for an evacuation order "You really need to see it to know for sure," Monticello said. The Thompsons gained entry into their neighborhood through an escort from their police-officer relative. But being there didn't make things easier. There was no sign of the Thompsons' cat, Pudge. They could hear her yowling at the back door as they fled, but there was no time to find her with a 30-foot wall of fire closing in. "I'm worried that she's gone, but being an outdoor cat she can fend for herself. I just don't know," Thompson said. The couple had been alerted to the fire by a family member who saw the fire jump Interstate 15 and burn a path toward their neighborhood. "Get out! Get out!" Thompson's husband yelled. The words still echo in her ears. As she dug through the rubble, there was no sign of 14 years of photo collages of the Padres training camp, her children's baby clothes, a wedding album, her son's karate awards and belts and keepsakes from her mother who died six years ago. Just a few dishes and a ceramic pumpkin.
photos from the wildfires from the internet link right here
http://www.big8atitsbestnews.com/socalwildfire10252007.htm
To donate items for individuals affected by recent wildfires, please go to any one of Goodwill Southern California’s 100 plus locations located throughout Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. You can find GSC’s locations by visiting www.goodwillsocal.org or by calling the toll-free number (888) 4-GOODWILL.
Free vouchers to receive donated items are assigned through American Red Cross of Greater Los Angeles. You may contact American Red Cross of Greater Los Angeles by calling 1-800-REDCROSS or 1-800-257-7575 (Spanish) or by visiting www.redcrossla.org.
For more information on donations please contact Community Relations staff Christianne Ray at 323-539-2095 or Mario Haug at 323-539-2030.
About Goodwill Southern California
Since 1916, Goodwill has been turning donations and retail purchases into good jobs that have led to brighter futures for thousands of people with disabilities and vocational challenges. More than 22,000 people benefit from Goodwill’s education, job training and employment placement programs each year. GSC operates 52 retail stores, 36 attended donation centers, three campuses and 18 workforce/training centers in the counties of Los Angeles (north of Rosecrans Ave.), Riverside and San Bernardino.
For more information about Goodwill and its programs, please call 1 (888) 4-GOODWILL or visit www.goodwillsocal.org.
To make a donation of clothing or household goods, please inquire with the following organizations:
St. Vincent De Paul - 619.446.2100
Goodwill - 888-446-6394
Salvation Army - 619-231-6000
http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msa=0&msid=114250687465160386813.00043d08ac31fe3357571&ie=UTF8&om=1&ll=32.778038,-114.65332&spn=3.897583,7.404785&z=7
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
- American Red Cross Safe and Well List - If you've been affected by the disaster, register yourself as 'safe and well.'. Concerned family and friends can search the list online and learn your status.
- FEMA Family Registry and Locator System: 1-800-588-9822 - Available free of charge for those have been separated from friends and family by the fires in Southern California.
- FEMA: California Wildfires - Learn about what the federal government is doing, and what kind of recovery assistance is available.
- California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection - Updates on fire conditions, useful phone numbers, disaster assistance information and more.
- Fire Weather Page - Fire weather forecasts from the National Weather Service.
- KPBS Radio and TV - Fire updates via the Web or your mobile phone, streaming news, and more. KPBS created the interactive Google map below, which shows fire perimeters, evacuation centers, road/transit conditions and other advisories.
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information from yahoo and google on this one page
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