Monday, October 22, 2007

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BURNS, WE ARE SURROUNDED AND IN SAN DIEGO...IT'S ARSON!!!!

Malibu, Canyon Country, Saugus, San Clarita, San Diego, Foothill Ranch, Santa Barbara, Inland Empire. We are surrounded by fires. And this just in ...

IT IS NOW OFFICIAL, AUTHORITIES HAVE CONFIRMED ARSON IN SAN DIEGO!

More details to follow as at every turn a new fires is popping up. All television stations here are wire to wire news coverage of the latest flame-ups. If you live in another state or another country, let me explain to you why this is all happening.

This time of year in Southern California we get what people in other parts of the world call, "Indian Summer." A week ago the temperature here in Southern California, (Los Angeles & San Diego) was about 69 to 74 degrees. This week the temperature has dramatically risen to 95 degrees. It is hot and very windy because in addition to the heat we have only 8 percent humidity and the Santa Ana Winds are blowing. The winds are fierce, bending and breaking trees. Therefore just one tiny cinder can blow on a wood cedar roof or the dry grass nearby and ignite a house. California is still the land of "wide-open" spaces and there are no roads to these places.

The terrine is rough, wild animals are running to get away from the fires, so you can imagine how dangerous this is for firefighters. Fire hoses can't reach the main source of the fires so they have to wait until the fire gets close enough to the road where the trucks are waiting. Overextended flying water tankers (super scoopers) can't keep up so in many cases for containment sake we have to let the fires burn themselves out.

Here's the latest from front-line journalist:

SAN DIEGO - Wildfires fanned by fierce desert winds consumed huge swaths of bone-dry Southern California on Monday, burning dozens of buildings and threatening hundreds more from Malibu to San Diego, including a jail, a hospital and nursing homes.

More than a dozen wildfires had engulfed the region, killing at least one person, injuring dozens more and forcing hundreds of thousands of evacuations. Overwhelmed firefighters said they lacked the resources to save many houses.
"We have more houses burning than we have people and engine companies to fight them," San Diego Fire Captain Lisa Blake said. "A lot of people are going to lose their homes today."

Nearly 250,000 people were forced to flee in San Diego County alone, where hundreds of patients were being moved by school bus and ambulance from a hospital and nursing homes, sheriff's spokeswoman Susan Knauss said.
About a dozen blazes erupted over the weekend, feeding on drought-parched land from the high desert to the Pacific Ocean. One person was killed and several injured in a fire near the Mexican border, and dozens of structures have burned across the region.

Warm temperatures and strong winds created "dramatically worse" conditions overnight as flames shot 200 feet high, said Bill Metcalf, chief of the North County Fire Protection District. In Orange County, a 1,049-inmate jail was being evacuated because of heavy smoke, sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said. Inmates were being bused to another facility in Irvine. All San Diego Police Department officers and off duty detectives were ordered to return to work to help with evacuations.

The fires have burned about 100,000 acres, or 156 square miles, in San Diego County, said county Supervisor Ron Roberts. Across the region, 40,000 acres, or 62 square miles, had burned by Sunday. "This is a major emergency," Roberts said. In many cases, crews couldn't begin to fight the fires because they were too busy rescuing residents who refused to leave, fire officials said.
"They didn't evacuate at all, or delayed until it was too late," Metcalf said. "And those folks who are making those decisions are actually stripping fire resources."

More than a dozen people were being treated at the UC San Diego Medical Center Regional Burn Center for burns and smoke inhalation, including four fighters — three in critical condition, officials said. Some of the injured were hikers, and others may be illegal immigrants.

One blaze devoured more than 5,000 acres in northern San Diego County and forced the evacuation of the community of Ramona, which has a population of about 36,000. Several structures were burned on the edge of town and sheriff's deputies called residents to alert them the fire was approaching the city, San Diego sheriff's Lt. Phil Brust said. "The winds are up, it's very, very dangerous conditions," San Diego County spokeswoman Lesley Kirk said. "Fires are popping up all over the place." Guardsmen assigned to the border were forced to evacuate one of their barracks and troops were aiding evacuations, said Col. David Baldwin, director of operations for the California National Guard. "The border is still secure, but agents are evacuating the threatened areas and the Guard is supporting that operation," Baldwin said. Qualcomm Stadium, home to the NFL's Chargers, was added to a growing list of evacuation centers.

The fires were being fueled by stronger than usual Santa Ana winds roaring out of the region's canyons, scientists said Monday. The powerful, dry winds typically blow between October and February and peak in December. Typically, Santa Ana conditions last about a day, but the ones that flared up over the weekend were expected to last through Tuesday.

"For it to be this strong for so many days is unusual," said Stuart Seto, a weather specialist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard. In Saugus, north of Los Angeles, about 120 people spent the night on cots in the gymnasium of Saugus High School, principal Bill Bolde said. Michele Beard fled her home with her husband, mother-in-law and three older children. "It just lit up the whole mountainside fiery red," said Beard, 48. "I had never seen anything like that so close before."

The fire in Malibu had destroyed or damaged 16 structures, among them a church, homes and a historic castle, and was expected to burn for another two to three days, Los Angeles County Fire Chief P. Michael Freeman said. "There will literally be thousands of homes that will be threatened" until the blaze is out, he said.

Portions contributed by: Associated Press writers Elliot Spagat