Students' Bonfire Blamed For Calif. Blaze

A bonfire built by a group of young adults caused a weekend wildfire in Santa Barbara that destroyed 210 homes, including multimillion dollar mansions, and injured more than two dozen people, authorities said Tuesday.
An anonymous tip led to the discovery that 10 college students had gathered for a late night hangout at an abandoned property where the fire originated, Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said. He declined to say which college the students attended.
"It appears this fire was the result of carelessness, not criminal intent," Brown said.
No criminal charges have been filed, but the county district attorney will review the case, Brown said.
The fire consumed nearly 2,000 acres in Santa Barbara County and critically injured a couple who were burned as they fled their home, which was destroyed by the flames.
The college group left the smoldering bonfire in the middle of the night and the embers sparked the wildfire 13 to 14 hours later, Brown said. The group had been hanging out at a property known locally as the "tea garden" next to an abandoned tea house in the hills of Montecito.
"They thought the fire was extinguished, but we don't have a lot of detail to disclose about what they did to do so," Brown said.
The fire was the first of three blazes to erupt in Southern California in the last week which have collectively damaged or destroyed about 1,000 homes and blackened more than 65 square miles.
In Southern California, the Santa Ana winds that swept six counties like a blowtorch died down Tuesday, allowing crews to mop up the smoldering hotspots.
The fire in the San Fernando Valley was 70 percent contained; a third wildfire in Orange County was 75 percent contained.
For a second day, officials allowed residents to return to the Oakridge Mobile Home Park in Sylmar for a few minutes to salvage what they could from acres of ashes. The fire there burned about 480 homes and left 125 standing.
Residents whose homes were intact were allowed to quickly pick up clothes, toiletries, and other belongings under police escort, reported CBS News correspondent John Blackstone. The scale of destruction was hard for residents to accept.
The county said it was sending crisis counseling teams to comfort the victims.
Help began to come from the state and federal government. President Bush made a disaster declaration for California, freeing federal aid to areas ravaged by the wildfires that blacked more than 65 square miles.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger waived state fees for fire victims who need to replace destroyed birth certificates and other documents or obtain state property inspections. He also waived a one-week waiting period for unemployment insurance applicants who lost their jobs because of the fire.
The state has spent $305 million on emergency firefighting since the start of the fiscal year on July 1, $236 million more than lawmakers had planned.
The firefighting expense is adding to the state's $11.2 billion deficit, the governor's finance spokesman said Tuesday.
The state will try to get some of its costs reimbursed from the federal government, which pays for firefighting on federal land, said H.D. Palmer, spokesman for the state Department of Finance.
Last year's wildfires were the most expensive in state history, costing California more than $518 million.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report. An anonymous tip led to the discovery that 10 college students had gathered for a late night hangout at an abandoned property where the fire originated, Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said. He declined to say which college the students attended.
"It appears this fire was the result of carelessness, not criminal intent," Brown said.
No criminal charges have been filed, but the county district attorney will review the case, Brown said.
The fire consumed nearly 2,000 acres in Santa Barbara County and critically injured a couple who were burned as they fled their home, which was destroyed by the flames.
The college group left the smoldering bonfire in the middle of the night and the embers sparked the wildfire 13 to 14 hours later, Brown said. The group had been hanging out at a property known locally as the "tea garden" next to an abandoned tea house in the hills of Montecito.
"They thought the fire was extinguished, but we don't have a lot of detail to disclose about what they did to do so," Brown said.
The fire was the first of three blazes to erupt in Southern California in the last week which have collectively damaged or destroyed about 1,000 homes and blackened more than 65 square miles.
In Southern California, the Santa Ana winds that swept six counties like a blowtorch died down Tuesday, allowing crews to mop up the smoldering hotspots.
The fire in the San Fernando Valley was 70 percent contained; a third wildfire in Orange County was 75 percent contained.
For a second day, officials allowed residents to return to the Oakridge Mobile Home Park in Sylmar for a few minutes to salvage what they could from acres of ashes. The fire there burned about 480 homes and left 125 standing.
Residents whose homes were intact were allowed to quickly pick up clothes, toiletries, and other belongings under police escort, reported CBS News correspondent John Blackstone. The scale of destruction was hard for residents to accept.
"It looks like a battlefield," said Rick Asavis. "Just like a bomb went off here."
The county said it was sending crisis counseling teams to comfort the victims.
Help began to come from the state and federal government. President Bush made a disaster declaration for California, freeing federal aid to areas ravaged by the wildfires that blacked more than 65 square miles.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger waived state fees for fire victims who need to replace destroyed birth certificates and other documents or obtain state property inspections. He also waived a one-week waiting period for unemployment insurance applicants who lost their jobs because of the fire.
The state has spent $305 million on emergency firefighting since the start of the fiscal year on July 1, $236 million more than lawmakers had planned.
The firefighting expense is adding to the state's $11.2 billion deficit, the governor's finance spokesman said Tuesday.
The state will try to get some of its costs reimbursed from the federal government, which pays for firefighting on federal land, said H.D. Palmer, spokesman for the state Department of Finance.
Last year's wildfires were the most expensive in state history, costing California more than $518 million.
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All fires, including fireplace fires, should be prohibited during the "fire season", and when the winds, heat and humidity reach certain levels.
This should be State law, with severe penalties for breaking the law.
Not only do fires cause damage, they cause serious air pollution. No wood burning fireplaces should be sold or permitted.
The public should be responsible to report all fires they may see, bonfires,as well as smoke from chimneys, indicating a wood burning fire.
Let me get this straight. A bunch of bored college kids (who should know better) cost the state of California millions of dollars in financial aid, burned down 1000 homes, not to mention 65 acres of land and DaVicar1 wants to let them off with a warning? Something like, "Don''t play with fire kids"???
Homes and lives were completely destroyed. This was complete negligence. They gotta be held accountable for this horrendous crime.
I blame the government of California for this act of carelessness. As vulnerable as this region is to wild fires, why allow the igniting of any fire, for whatever purpose, to be begin with. The state government there should enact a law banning ANY fire; Period!