Another Calif. wildfire grows larger, threatening more homes
This blaze, east of the state capital in Sacramento, now has 2,500 firefighters working to contain it.
Noah Berger/REUTERS
Weed, Calif.
Just days after a wildfire tore through a small Northern California town and destroyed scores of homes, crews on Wednesday battled another fast-moving blaze in the region that was also threatening residences.
Hundreds of additional firefighters were dispatched to the fire near the town of Pollock Pines, about 60 miles east of Sacramento, bringing the number fighting the blaze to more than 2,500 personnel. That was an increase of about 1,000 from the previous day.
The fire grew by thousands of acres overnight and had burned through nearly 29 square miles. It was threatening 500 homes, at least some of which were under mandatory evacuation orders, and was just 5 percent contained.
"It's burning in steep, dense terrain with heavy timber that's posing quite a challenge," said Alyssa Smith, a California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokeswoman.
Meanwhile, further north, about 110 homes were destroyed and another 90 damage from a fire that tore through the tiny timber town of Weed near the Oregon border on Monday, city administrator Ron Stock said Wednesday.
State fire Battalion Chief Scott McLean says four firefighters lost their homes due to the fire. Two churches, a community center and a library also have been destroyed.
An elementary school and the century-old town's last wood products mill were also damaged. With the maintenance shed reduced to twisted sheet-metal and the main manufacturing facility suffering structural damage, the Roseburg Forest Products veneer mill on the outskirts of Weed was out of commission while workers began assessing the damage, said Kellye Wise, vice president for human resources of the company based in Dillard, Oregon.
The company hoped to have a better idea of when the mill could reopen by next week.
"We were in the middle of its path," he said of the fire. "It shows the great response of our employees, some of whom lost their own homes."
As the fire roared through trees, brush and homes on Schoolhouse Hill on Monday, the mill had enough warning to send home most of the 60 workers on the day shift and mobilize the mill fire crew, Wise said.
While they fought to save the mill, firebrands blew overhead and ignited blocks of houses downwind.
With 170 workers, the mill is the second largest employer in Weed, a blue-collar town of 3,000 people in the shadow of Mount Shasta, and it dates to 1897, when founder Abner Weed decided to take advantage of its strong winds as a natural drying process for the lumber turned out by his sawmills.
The mill shutdown, however temporary, is one more hit to Weed, which has never recovered from the logging cutbacks of the 1990s. Meant to protect the threatened northern spotted owl and salmon, the drawdown put tens of thousands of people in Siskiyou County out of work, county Supervisor Michael Kobseff said.
The mill jobs are particularly valuable because they pay wages high enough to support a family, much higher than the tourism jobs many must take, he said. Some who lost their homes are determined to rebuild, but others have no insurance, making state and federal assistance important, he said.
"It's just going to be this close-knit community trying to get back on track," he said. "It's not going to be overnight."
Winds gusting up to 40 mph pushed the flames into town, where they quickly chewed through a hillside neighborhood. The cause was under investigation.
Fire crews took advantage of calmer winds and firefighting aircraft Tuesday, gaining control in and around Weed. But flames still threatened other parts of California.
In Oakhurst, a foothill community south of Yosemite National Park, a 320-acre fire that damaged or destroyed 71 structures — 37 of them homes — was 60 percent contained. About 600 residents from 200 homes remained evacuated, Madera County sheriff's spokeswoman Erica Stuart said.
More than 4,000 wildfires have burned in California this year.