SACRAMENTO, Calif., June 11, 2008

Northern Calif. Fires Expected To Spread

More Than 20 Homes Destroyed In Wildfires; High Winds Likely To Further Fuel Blaze

  • A Stockton firefighter pulls a hose around the back of a home destroyed by a fast wind driven fire in Stockton California. The fire ignited in a corridor along Interstate 5 and destroyed at least 30 homes and slightly injured two firefighters, a city spokeswoman said.

    A Stockton firefighter pulls a hose around the back of a home destroyed by a fast wind driven fire in Stockton California. The fire ignited in a corridor along Interstate 5 and destroyed at least 30 homes and slightly injured two firefighters, a city spokeswoman said.  (AP)

  • Interactive Wildfires

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(AP)  Slowing winds and cooler overnight temperatures across Northern California helped firefighters get a handle on blazes that destroyed dozens of homes and left a firefighter severely burned, but gusts were expected to whip up again Wednesday.

Tuesday's fires were concentrated in areas north and south of the state capital, while separate blazes burned near the coast.

A 2.5-square mile wildfire destroyed 21 homes and about 30 other structures in Palermo, a town of about 5,000 residents, said Joshpae White, a California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokesman. It was about 50 percent contained Tuesday night.

The community about 60 miles north of Sacramento was evacuated temporarily while at least 350 firefighters fought to protect homes. About 50 residents planned to spend the night at an evacuation center.

"The winds have significantly diminished, and that's helped our efforts quite a bit," White said Tuesday night.

However, gusts of up to 31 mph were forecast around Stockton, about 50 miles south of Sacramento, on Wednesday.

A fire captain fighting a grass fire just south of Sacramento was hospitalized with severe burns after it unexpectedly changed direction and became more intense.

Sacramento Metro Fire Department Capt. Jeff Lynch said the captain was heavily sedated in the University of California, Davis Regional Burn Center in Sacramento with third-degree burns to his hands and second-degree burns to his arms.

Several fires along Interstate 5 in Stockton damaged or destroyed 30 homes before they were extinguished Tuesday afternoon, city spokeswoman Connie Cochran said. About two dozen other homes suffered minor damage, such as burned fences.

Two firefighters were treated for minor injuries in the Stockton blazes, Cochran said. Some residents were treated for smoke inhalation, but no one had to be hospitalized, she said.

Grass, brush and trees are in matchstick condition across California after the driest March, April and May on record.

Across the country in eastern North Carolina, winds whipped up a 64-square-mile wildfire, forcing the evacuation of 50 homes, officials said. The fire, sparked June 1 by a lightning strike, is about 40 percent contained, officials said.

Firefighters scrambled to strengthen and build about 20 miles of containment lines as the blaze approached the Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by al2008-2009 June 12, 2008 12:32 PM EDT
I*m appalled at the administration*s lack of response to the global warming heat waves, fires, and droughts. We have no comprehensive strategy in place whatsoever, let alone a detailed plan of action to mitigate the effects of these droughts, and mother earth continues to suffer while the administration refuses to go forward and do what*s right for mother earth.
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How long must we sit idly by while our mother continues to suffer from the warming taking place at a feverish pace? How long must our mother suffer before we have proper c02 taxes put into place? How long must the destruction of mother earth take place before we finally put responsible regulations into effect? How long must we wait until we beef up our corn ethanol production? At least Obama wants to cut c02 pollution by 80%; he is definitely our best hope. As Obama has recently stated on Earth Day, we will save the planet. We will change our economy to a green economy, eliminate our current anti-progressive economy, and eliminate c02 pollution by 80% in our generation. This is a change we all definitely need, a much needed change for the better.
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We the people call upon our leaders to implement a comprehensive antiglobal warming strategy at once and work in coordination with state and federal officials; these heatwaves and droughts continue to worsen and the quicker we stop the warming the sooner we will see these heatwaves and droughts cease. We need action now.
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by mexinvasion June 11, 2008 4:18 PM EDT
So we have fires in CA, a blizzard in WA, floods in the midwest, and a heatwave in the East. But wait a minute. Pres Bush says all the alleged weather changes are just cooincidence.
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