Southern California wildfires torched dozens of mountain homes, tore through a ski resort and forced thousands to evacuate in suburbs east of Los Angeles on Wednesday.
Around 40 homes and cabins burned in the villages of Mount Baldy and Wrightwood and flames swept through the nearby Mountain High ski resort in San Bernardino County, the Los Angeles Fire Department reported.
The blaze, named the Bridge Fire, exploded to over 48,000 acres (19,000 hectares), becoming the largest in the state and one of four burning within sight of eachother. The Southern California fires have blackened over 105,000 acres of scrub, brush and forest, an area a third the size of Los Angeles.
The Airport Fire in Orange and Riverside counties destroyed dozens of homes in El Cariso Village and Decker Canyon as it grew to over 22,000 acres, according to authorities and local news reports.
“There was no more exit, you had to drive through the flames to get out,” Ryan LaMothe, whose home was destroyed by the Airport Fire, told local television news station KTLA5.
Governor Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency and said he had secured federal funds to fight the fires.
Tinder-dry scrub and gusting winds are driving flames up canyons and mountainsides during a severe heatwave that scientists blame on climate change. Over a dozen injuries have been reported.
People taped gaps around their doors and schools closed in at least 10 districts because of smoky air from another blaze in San Bernardino County, the Line Fire.
Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said deputies were patrolling evacuated neighborhoods to prevent looting.
The San Bernardino Sheriff’s office arrested a 34-year-old man for allegedly starting the Line Fire on Sept. 5.
Wildfires are a natural occurrence in mountains east of Los Angeles but the ability of firefighters to just let them burn has been hampered by people moving there after being priced out of the city. Many new homeowners are struggling to get fire insurance.
The area of land burned in California this year is already double that of 2023, when the state enjoyed more moisture, according to data from California’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or CAL FIRE.
The United States is experiencing a strong wildfire year with 6.9 million acres burned to date, compared with an annual, full-year average of around 7 million acres over the last decade, according to National Interagency Fire Center data. — Reuters
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