Sunday, January 19, 2014

LA-area fire wanes; dangerous conditions remain

LA-area fire wanes; dangerous conditions remain

San Francisco Chronicle - ‎1 hour ago‎
GLENDORA, Calif. (AP) - Fire officials continue their steady progress in surrounding a wildfire near Los Angeles that has destroyed several homes.
Glendora Fire in California Will Burn for Another Four Days
Crews chase flare-ups in California fire that kept residents away
As LA-area fire wanes, dangerous conditions remain
2014 California wildfire season

LA-area fire wanes; dangerous conditions remain

Updated 10:21 am, Sunday, January 19, 2014
  • An aircraft drops fire retardant on the Colby Fire on Friday, Jan. 17, 2014, near Azusa, Calif. Firefighters were chasing flare-ups Friday morning in the damaging wildfire that was largely tamed but kept thousands of people from their homes in the foothill suburbs northeast of Los Angeles. Photo: Jae C. Hong, AP / AP
    An aircraft drops fire retardant on the Colby Fire on Friday, Jan. 17, 2014, near Azusa, Calif. Firefighters were chasing flare-ups Friday morning in the damaging wildfire that was largely tamed but kept thousands of people from their homes in the foothill suburbs northeast of Los Angeles. Photo: Jae C. Hong, AP

GLENDORA, Calif. (AP) — Firefighters said Sunday they continued their steady progress in surrounding a wildfire near Los Angeles that destroyed several homes.
The Los Angeles County Fire Department said the fire was 78 percent contained, with full containment expected Wednesday.
Meanwhile, hundreds of residents who fled the blaze in suburbs about 25 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles returned home Saturday evening as red-flag warnings of extremely dangerous fire conditions expired. Officials cautioned that bone-dry winter conditions remain a threat for the region.
Crews focused on securing fire lines around the roughly 3-square-mile blaze and looked ahead to rehabilitating the burn area to prevent erosion and possible mudslides, said U.S. Forest Service spokesman Robert Brady.
"It's starting to look fairly good," Brady said. "We're still in very dry conditions, so I would remind people to be careful out there."
The fire erupted early Thursday in the Angeles National Forest when Santa Ana winds hit a campfire that authorities said was recklessly set by three men. Gusts quickly spread flames from the San Gabriel Mountains into Glendora and Azusa, where some 3,700 people had to evacuate at the fire's peak.
Five homes were destroyed and 17 other houses, garages and other structures were damaged, according to early assessments.
The state is in a period of extended dry weather compounded in Southern California by repeated periods of the regional Santa Anas, dry and powerful winds that blow from the interior toward the coast, pushing back the normal flow of moist ocean air and raising temperatures to summerlike levels.
The dry conditions statewide led Gov. Jerry Brown to formally declare a drought Friday in order to seek a range of federal assistance.
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LA-area fire wanes; dangerous conditions remain

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