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CBSNews /

CBS/ AP/ August 16, 2009, 7:46 AM

Schwarzenegger Urges Wildfire Evacuations

Updated 7:30 p.m. ET

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger urged residents to heed mandatory evacuation orders Saturday as 6,800 firefighters battled to control nearly a dozen blazes across the parched state.

Schwarzenegger met with firefighters at the Lockheed Fire in the Santa Cruz Mountains, a day after the governor returned to the state from attending the funeral of his mother-in-law, Eunice Shriver.

The Lockheed Fire has blackened close to 8 square miles of remote wilderness since Wednesday and prompted mandatory evacuations of the mountain communities of Swanton and Bonny Doon, which have about 2,400 residents and several wineries.

"These fires will be different than most of the fires because of the terrain," Schwarzenegger said. "It's very hard to get equipment in there and the resources in there. That's why you see a lot of helicopters and fixed winged aircraft being used."

The fire spread slightly overnight but crews gained some ground when the winds died down, containing nearly 30 percent of the fire, said CalFire spokeswoman Julie Hutchinson.

But an offshore wind was expected to blow into the area later Saturday, bringing hotter temperatures, dropping the humidity and drying out the trees and brush.

"If we get those winds, those high temperatures and low humidity, it could definitely cause a much more rapid fire and a lot more fire spread," Hutchinson said.

Schwarzenegger said the Lockheed Fire was one of 11 burning in the state. Other blazes have forced evacuations and knocked out power, and smoke and ash from the growing wildfire in Santa Barbara County whirled into the Los Angeles area, prompting an unusual weather forecast of "scattered smoke."

Lt. Gov. John Garamendi declared a state of emergency Friday for Santa Cruz County.

Schwarzenegger said 25 firefighters had been injured in various blazes, but the extent of their injuries wasn't immediately known.

"We pray that they heal as quickly as possible," Schwarzenegger said.

The Lockheed Fire blaze started Wednesday about 10 miles north of Santa Cruz. A change in winds shifted the fire away from Bonny Doon but closer to Swanton, CalFire spokesman Daniel Berlant said.

No homes had been destroyed, and no injuries were reported. The blaze damaged two small structures and was threatening more than 1,000 homes and buildings. The cause is under investigation.

Hannah Good, a veterinarian who lives in Bonny Doon with her partner and two children, said workers helped to evacuate her birds, cats, donkey, pony and dog.

"It was quite a scramble getting the animals and our family out of there," Good said. "Once I smelled the smoke, I knew we had problems."

Meanwhile, more than 230 homes and ranches in canyons and ridges near a wildfire in the Los Padres National Forest remained under evacuation orders. The week-old blaze in northern Santa Barbara County has burned 118 square miles of timber and brush in the Los Padres National Forest, 140 miles northwest of Los Angeles. It was 25 percent contained Saturday. Nearly 2,000 firefighters were fighting the blaze, which started last Saturday.

Bonnie Bartling with the National Weather Service said scattered smoke from the fire is in the weekend forecast for the Santa Monica Mountains, San Fernando Valley, and other areas of northern Los Angeles County.

CBS News correspondent John Blackstone reports that the weather forecast is not good for firefighting, as crews were concerned about the wind and heat on tap for the next few days.

In Yuba County north of Sacramento, a wildfire covering more than 1.5 square miles destroyed two homes Friday, forced the evacuation of about 120 residences and knocked out power in the Sierra foothills town of Dobbins, according to CalFire spokeswoman Joann Cartoscelli.

More than 400 firefighters had contained about 35 percent of the fire and were expected to decide Saturday afternoon whether some residents could return to their homes, Cartoscelli said.

Crews were trying to prevent the fire from spreading to the Colgate Powerhouse, the oldest powerhouse in the state. It provides electricity to the Dobbins area.

In Alameda County, more than 400 firefighters were struggling to control a wind-driven grass fire that had grown to about 23 square miles near Tracy, according to a CalFire report. The Corral Fire was 50 percent contained, and while officials initially worried it could threaten visibility and traffic on Interstate 5 and Interstate 580, Alameda County Fire department spokeswoman Aisha Knowles said Saturday afternoon there was no threat to the highways.

In far northern California, Trinity County District Attorney Michael Harper has charged 60-year-old Brenda Eitzen of Los Molinos with two felonies and two misdemeanors alleging she negligently sparked a blaze by throwing away a lit cigarette Wednesday. The charges could bring a maximum four-year prison term. The Coffin Fire, burning nearly 19 square miles, was 86 percent contained.

To the east, 10 rural homes remained evacuated as wind spread a fire in steep terrain near Burney. Firefighters had contained about 85 percent of the nearly 11-square-mile blaze about 200 miles north of Sacramento.

"They are making very good progress" said James Stewart, a CalFire spokesman. "It's just a matter of putting everything out now."
CBS/ AP
10 Comments Add a Comment
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pepperwood2 says:
I hope that Caliphony realizes that this situation is contributing to GW and will only get worse. For the last 50 years we tried to warn the country that GW was a real problem. Noboby cares! So Sad!
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nascar8de says:
Let it burn and save the houses. If only they would let the forest be logged then there wouldnt be so much fuel for these fires.
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zonkzilla says:
An idiot Republican governor in a state full of idiots.
How appropriate.
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donnerwetter says:
Why put it out? Let nature do what it does best.
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sjc_1 replies:
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Big Basin, Felton, Scotts Valley and lots of small towns are in the Santa Cruz mountains, if they just let it burn, there would be 1000s homeless. It would be worse than the 7.0 Loma Prieta earth quake of 1989 that devastated the region.
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sjc_1 says:
The Santa Ana winds blow in southern California, Santa Cruz is on the coast north of central California. There is a lot of rugged terrain in the wooded areas in the Santa Cruz mountains. Once a fire gets going in that area it is difficult to put out.
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woeisme1 says:
Where's the comment?
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John_Merritt replies:
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Having grown up in Riverside Co. and lived there many years, I can tell you the Santa Ana's are definitely something to be reckoned with. Under normal circumstances it is too early in the season for these types of winds and Santa Cruz is too displaced from desert and mountain passes for this to be a Santa Ana condition. I may be wrong though.

Sometimes these 'wild fires' breed their own wind conditions and they can generate tremednous high velocity weather systems within themselves. I wish they would create a documentary of firefighters and air tanker pilots who can tell their story, because they are incredible experiences.

Some pilots have stated they have flown over areas and the winds appear to have a vacuum where they actually can suck something right out of the air. They can also explode into the air.

These firefighters are truly incredible people and brave as any people that live wihtin the confines of this country. In the fire seasons many of these guys work a solid 24 hours fighting 'the monster' as many call it. That is, and they are, incredible to say the least. Good luck to all of them and say a pray for their safety and return.
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woeisme1 says:
Santa Ana winds or does the_majesty live there and is just blowing more hot air as he is so famous for.
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