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Serious Largest Fire in History now @ Los Angeles

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http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-la-tuna-fire-wildfire-20170902-story.html


L.A. Now California: This just in
LOCAL L.A. Now
Three homes burned as wildfire torches more than 5,000 acres
Fast-moving wildfire destroys 5,000 acres; homes evacuated in L.A., Burbank

A fast-moving brush fire that began Sept. 1 and exploded overnight in the Verdugo Mountains was threatening homes and keeping the 210 Freeway closed. (Sept. 2, 2017) (Sign up for our free video newsletter here http://bit.Iy/2n6VKPR)
Ruben Vives, Andrea Castillo and Alene TchekmedyianContact Reporters

A brush fire in the Verdugo Mountains north of downtown Los Angeles has burned more than 5,000 acres, making it one of the largest fires in the city’s history and one that officials warn could grow larger if erratic weather conditions continue.

Hundreds of firefighters battled the blaze overnight and into the morning, and at one point, the flames were spreading in four directions amid intense heat and wild winds. Three homes have burned, but no injuries have been reported, officials said Saturday.

Firefighters faced another day of triple-digit temperatures in some inland areas of Southern California as a heat wave that has gripped the state continues. By Saturday afternoon, winds were blowing up to 17 mph in the area of the La Tuna fire, with humidity at 27%, which was almost 10 percentage points higher than the same time Friday.

Burbank recorded a high of 100 about 2 p.m. while the thermometer hit 95 in the Little Tujunga area, according the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

Los Angeles Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas said firefighters late Saturday afternoon were dealing with “very erratic weather and wind.”

“The wind can change directions — it can go 180 degrees at 20 miles per hour within a few minutes,” Terrazas said. “We are very conscious of that. We are putting our people in places to protect structures where needed.”

Winds are forecast to calm down this evening in the area of the fire, according to Carol Smith, a meteorologist with the weather service. Temperatures should drop to the mid-80s overnight, and humidity is expected to increase as monsoonal moisture from Tropical Storm Lidia moves into the region, Smith said. The weather system could bring rain and thunderstorms, which raises the flash flooding risk for burned areas, she said.
The La Tuna fire burns in the Verdugo Mountains

A fast-moving brush fire in the Verdugo Mountains north of Los Angeles has grown to 5,000 acres and burned three homes, officials said.

More than 700 homes in the area are under evacuation, including 300 in Burbank, 250 in Glendale and 180 in Los Angeles, officials said.

“Our priority is saving people and saving property,” Terrazas told reporters at a morning news conference in Lake View Terrace, where he was joined by Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.

“There is a lot of unburned fuel” in this area, Terrazas warned, noting that the last fire in the area was at least 30 years ago.

Both Terrazas and Garcetti said the La Tuna fire was the largest in the city’s history in terms of acreage.

“We can’t recall anything larger,” Terrazas said.

“Our biggest concern is the wind and weather,” the chief said. “The erratic weather is our No. 1 challenge. If there’s no wind, this is a relatively easy fire to put out. But when the wind changes, it changes our priorities because other properties become at risk.”

The fire was 10% contained Saturday afternoon, officials said. Winds were blowing between 10 and 15 mph, with humidity at 10% to 15%.

The combination of dry brush, high heat, low humidity and shifting winds make it possible for the fire to spread, officials said.

Garcetti issued a statement Saturday evening saying that he had declared a local emergency and asked Gov. Jerry Brown to do the same “so that state and federal assistance can be provided to the city as quickly as possible.”



Earlier, the city of Glendale announced mandatory evacuations in the Glenwood Oaks and Mountain Oaks neighborhoods. Residents in the city’s Whiting Woods neighborhood also were told to be prepared to leave.

Chris Hall, 37, was spraying his roof with a water hose Saturday morning when two police officers pulled up to his driveway on McGroarty Street in Sunland-Tujunga.

“Now it’s mandatory,” they told him. “Get your stuff and go.”

Hall said he wanted to stay but didn’t argue.

The officers gave him 20 minutes to pack, but Hall said he already was prepared. The night before, he had organized his photos — those of his daughter’s birth, birthdays and visits to the zoo — and important documents, piling them in the trunk of his Nissan Sentra.

“Everything else can be replaced,” he said, sitting behind the wheel of his car and ready to flee.

Earlier that morning, after seeing flames creep up behind a nearby art center, he dropped his 5-year-old daughter and 12-year-old stepson, along with their pet hamster, at a friend’s home. He left their goldfish behind.

Over the last couple of weeks, as wildfires raged across California, Hall said he spent hours trimming trees and pruning bushes in case a fire erupted nearby.

“We did a lot of cleaning,” he said.

Music teacher Valerie Keith was 40 minutes into her work day Saturday morning when her Tujunga neighbor called.

“You gotta come home,” the neighbor told her.

Keith already was already on edge. Her dogs and cat were home — alone — as flames crept closer to her house. She rushed back.

Soon after, police told her she needed to leave.

Keith frantically loaded her pets in her car, along with her two best violins, spilling on her hands the yogurt she had taken for breakfast but hadn’t eaten.

“I thought I was going to be safe today,” she said.

Just about ready to escape, she remembered something. She dashed back inside and grabbed a framed photograph of her mother and a banjo made from a tambourine.

“When you have to leave for safety, then you suddenly realize what’s important,” she said.

In Burbank, Red Cross officials rushed Saturday to set up a shelter at McCambridge Recreation Center. Animals were housed in kennels in an animal control vehicle stationed in the parking lot.

“It got really bad in Burbank last night,” said Eric Baumgardner, emergency coordinator for the Burbank Fire Department. “It shifted on us real quick.”

Baumgardner said that no homes or structures in Burbank were damaged Friday night but that the flames got within 100 feet of houses in Burbank Estates above Brace Canyon and the Stough Canyon Nature Center.

Firefighters set up structure protection groups overnight, including at least 25 fire engines that backed into residents’ driveways in case the fire got too close.

By 3 p.m. Saturday, more than 30 people had checked into the Burbank shelter. Some took naps to make up for the sleepless night.

Peter Glassberg, 64, brought in four of his cats and four rescue kittens that are up for adoption. Police transported the pets in carriers to animal control vans and drove them to the Burbank Animal Shelter, where they would stay until the fire died down. Glassberg hugged his favorite cat, a Siamese named My Guy, before handing him over.

Glassberg rents a trailer in middle of a large property up La Tuna Canyon Road. One cat, Baby Girl, had escaped last week and had not come back before he was evacuated.

He watched when the fire started Friday afternoon and stayed up all night as it threatened to come down the hillside. He was packed and ready to go when the evacuation order came at 9 a.m. Saturday.

“I looked inside and I said, ‘No, it can go, it can go,’ ” he said, tears welling in his eyes. “It makes you face what’s important in your life.”

As he drove his beat-up SUV down the canyon, flames roared 20 feet away, nearly licking the roadside. He arrived at the shelter in faded jeans and a dusty cowboy hat smelling like a campfire. He hadn’t slept in 32 hours.

Inside the vehicle were all his greatest possessions: personal journals, photos, medical records and recordings from the band he joined at 22 as a keyboardist and songwriter.

Raul Claros, executive director of the Northern Valleys chapter of the Red Cross, said an apartment fire also caused several evacuations in Santa Clarita. Meanwhile, he said, 20 staff had been diverted for the last six days to work as dispatch operators for Hurricane Harvey evacuees in Texas.

“Then the emergency started at home with these fires,” he said.

When winds pushed a band of flames over the canyon ridgeline Friday night, authorities ordered those living in the Brace Canyon Park area and Castleman Estates to “leave immediately” and head to evacuation shelters, according to an alert issued by the fire department. The Stough Canyon Nature Center also is under evacuation order.

Nancy Varney, 71, got to the recreation center at 2:30 a.m. with her dog, Maggie. Her husband stayed at their home in Brace Canyon.

“It was coming down the hill pretty fast,” she said.

At 5 a.m., Varney took her dog outside, where they sat until noon, when the temperature reached 96 degrees and the smoke left a gray plume above the recreation center. She opted to walk around the mall as she waited for good news.

On Saturday, the fire was burning on multiple fronts southwest of the 210 Freeway, which remained closed between the 2 Freeway and Wheatland Avenue. It was not known when the freeway would be reopened.

Burbank police were going door to door early in the day urging residents on Haven Way, Joaquin Drive, Olney Place, Remy Place, Mystic View Place and View Crest Drive to evacuate. Groton Drive and Hamline Place, east of Stephen Road, also were evacuated.

Three evacuation centers were set up. They include the McCambridge Recreation Center, 1515 N. Glenoaks Blvd., in Burbank; the Sunland Recreation Center, 8651 Foothill Blvd., in Sunland; and Crescenta Valley High School, 2900 Community Ave., in La Crescenta.

As Wendy Schmidt walked her dog, Daisy, near the Sunland Recreation Center late Saturday morning, flakes of ash floated all around as water-dropping helicopters roared overhead.

She said she could see the blaze from the front window of her home in Haines Canyon above La Tuna Canyon Park, where she lives with her husband, eight chickens, three cats and a dog. But she said they had not been ordered to evacuate.

“It’s getting closer to us,” she said. “You can be safe one minute, then in danger the next.”

She said she planned to spend the rest of her day indoors to avoid the smoky air.

Volunteers at the evacuation center said about a dozen people spent the night in the shelter. They said residents were allowed to return home Saturday morning.

By 10:30 a.m., the center was empty, but it will be open until at least Sunday morning, offering snacks and cots to those forced to flee.

Andrea Heintz, 78, was getting ready for bed Friday when she saw on the news that there was a mandatory evacuation around Brace Canyon near Burbank. She and her husband have lived there since 1970 and have seen several wildfires over the years.

They had always stayed home, but this time, the news worried her. Her husband called her foolish.

Heintz said she took all of their valuables and left. Her husband, like Varney’s, stayed behind.

She arrived at the hastily assembled Red Cross shelter at McCambridge Recreation Center in Burbank around 11 p.m. The fire had quickly shifted course late Friday, so cots weren’t set up until 1:30 a.m.

She and the other evacuees passed the time watching TV and chatting. Every five minutes, they would walk outside to watch the blaze burning bright orange against the dark sky.

“It was really scary,” she said. “You didn’t realize the magnitude of it.”

Heintz said she didn’t sleep. On Saturday morning, the 20 or so evacuees at the center ate a breakfast of doughnuts, cereal and fruit.

Heintz called her husband. There was soot an inch thick in their swimming pool, she said, but at least he had gotten some sleep.

Officials warned of poor air quality throughout the region. Burbank police officers were wearing respiratory masks early Saturday and urging residents to stay indoors and avoid outside activities because of the heavy smoke.

The South Coast Air Quality Management District on Saturday recommended that children, older adults and people with respiratory disease living in smoke-impacted areas stay indoors. Air quality is expected to reach unhealthy levels in portions of the east San Fernando Valley, the San Gabriel Valley and the San Gabriel Mountains, according to the air district’s smoke advisory.

In the areas affected by the smoke, “people really have to limit how much they’re outside,” AQMD spokesman Patrick Chandler said.

Amid Saturday’s high temperatures, “you already have an inversion layer holding a lot of ozone and pollutants close to the surface,” he said. “Then you add the fire, and all the particulate matter that comes from the ash and the smoke.”

Residents in smoke-impacted areas were advised to keep windows and doors closed and avoid vigorous activities, both indoors and outdoors.

“Run your air conditioner if you have one and keep the fresh air intake closed and the filter clean to prevent bringing additional smoke inside,” the AQMD smoke advisory said. “Avoid using a swamp cooler or whole-house fan to prevent bringing additional smoke inside.”




AFP_S204W-2323.jpg



https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...s-3000-acres-and-forces-hundreds-to-evacuate/



Largest fire in Los Angeles history forces hundreds to evacuate

By Amy B Wang September 2 at 5:20 PM

A fast-spreading brush fire north of Los Angeles forced hundreds of people to evacuate their homes Friday and Saturday as firefighters struggled against triple-digit temperatures and erratic winds to contain the blaze, officials said.

Within a day, the wildfire — named the La Tuna Fire for its origin in La Tuna Canyon to the north of Burbank — had grown to cover more than 5,000 acres, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department. In all, about 300 homes in Burbank, 250 homes in Glendale and 180 homes in Los Angeles were under evacuation as of Saturday afternoon.

As of Saturday, the fire was 10 percent contained. Although no injuries were reported, one home had been destroyed, the fire department said.

“This continues to be a very dynamic fire,” Los Angeles Fire Chief Ralph M. Terrazas said at a news conference Saturday. “The weather conditions are somewhat stable, but that could change at any moment.”

[San Francisco smashes all-time high, hits 106 degrees]

Terrazas added he was confident the fire had burned “well above” 5,000 acres as of Saturday afternoon, but he was not able to give a fixed acreage. Earlier in the day, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti confirmed that by acreage, the blaze was the largest in the city’s history.

Fire officials said erratic wind and weather were posing the greatest challenges to extinguishing the fire. Authorities were particularly concerned about how quickly the blaze could spread in the area’s canyons.

“This is a slow burning, ‘backing’ fire (meaning it burns down hill) and we have resources at the base of the hills to defend homes,” fire spokeswoman Margaret Stewart said in a statement. “When the fire encounters a canyon, it can accelerate and burn uphill.”

Video taken Saturday morning near La Tuna Canyon Road, over the hills to the north of Burbank, showed flames and heavy smoke.

#LaTunaFire; Active flame this morning near Sunland Bl. #LAFD pic.twitter.com/ogaaEEa5mO

— Erik Scott (@PIOErikScott) September 2, 2017

The La Tuna Fire was first reported about 1:30 p.m. Friday as a small, one-acre vegetation fire south of Interstate 210 near Burbank. Although firefighters quickly extinguished the bulk of that fire, high winds caused embers to jump across the highway, sparking a spot fire north of I-210, Stewart said.

Within a few hours, more than 250 firefighters from multiple agencies had been dispatched to the fire, which had grown to 500 acres and shut down a portion of I-210.

By 9 p.m. Friday, the fire had tripled in size to 1,500 acres. Authorities soon ordered mandatory evacuations, street by street, for neighborhoods in Burbank closest to Verdugo Mountain Park. A surreal scene unfolded in Burbank as bright flames could be seen coming over the hilltops to the north of the city.

@BurbankPD helicopter TFO took this photo a few minutes ago from high above #Burbank. #LaTunaFire pic.twitter.com/mQ42ZKfzd7

— Burbank Police (@BurbankPD) September 2, 2017

Nearly 200 homes in Burbank were evacuated late Friday, with police officers going door to door throughout the night to ensure residents had left the area. Police continued to enforce new mandatory evacuation orders throughout Saturday.

Just before midnight, the Los Angeles Fire Department reported that the La Tuna Fire was burning in four directions, including down over the hills toward Burbank and north through the La Tuna Canyon above I-210. The fire’s “erratic” spread was “driven by strong, gusting winds,” the agency said.

#LaTunaFire General burn area of fire +5,000 acres 10% contained 1 house lost Detailed evac map pending List here https://t.co/YrRAiGk9Tv pic.twitter.com/KduKAoUzdJ

— LAFD (@LAFD) September 2, 2017

California has been experiencing a severe heat wave, expected to last through Labor Day.

Carol Smith, a National Weather Service meteorologist, told the Los Angeles Times that a combination of conditions were working against firefighters: temperatures of up to 106 degrees, 50 mph gusts of wind and unstable air.

“It just really stokes the fire,” Smith told the newspaper. “I mean, when it’s hot and the gusty winds, it’s been a bad mix of different things.”

As of Saturday afternoon, more than 500 firefighters were on scene, and a large portion of I-210 remained closed. Officials cautioned residents in the area to stay indoors and avoid outdoor activities because of heavy smoke. Police expect mandatory evacuation orders to remain in place into Sunday afternoon.

“Despite fire size, we remain confident in the plan in place and the work all firefighters at the incident are doing in defending property and lives,” the Los Angeles Fire Department said.
Photos of a fast-spreading wildfire burning north of Los Angeles
View Photos
The Los Angeles Fire Department has issued a mandatory evacuation order for residents in Burbank, Calif., as a raging brush fire threatens their homes. The fire north of Los Angeles also has shut down both sides of key freeway for holiday weekend travel.
 

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Angmoh need massive profitable illegal trade like opium target rich country like China to enrich their wealth for disasters like this.

Cant fuck in manufacturing using own white race as factory workers but kidnaps human Africans to do dirty factory works for them are what they are good at doing evil things.
 
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