High winds keep fanning deadly wildfires in California’s wine country
Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP
“Things went to hell last night,” winemaker Dean Vincent Bordigioni told the AP. The owner of Annadel Estate Winery said he awoke at 3 a.m. with flames spreading across a ridge above his property.
Firefighters spent much of the week digging ditches around the fires to keep them from spreading. On the other side of the barriers are some of Santa Rosa’s most expensive homes and a historic central plaza built centuries ago when the area was under Spanish rule.
High winds make it more likely the fires will jump those perimeters, officials said.
After losing ground overnight, firefighters were trying to keep the blaze from crossing into the city from the north on Saturday afternoon, with flames threatening streets on the outskirts of town, Steve Crawford, a Cal Fire operations chief, said.
Santa Rosa Police Chief Hank Schreeder said his department was fielding calls from people complaining about looting, and that, even with new evacuation orders for some parts of the city, officials were working on allowing residents to return to areas no longer under the threat of fire ─ and where the fire already destroyed homes.
That includes the area around
Coffey Park, which was largely reduced to ashes.
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“We’re working on plans to open up areas hardest hit and give people the tools they need to rebuild their lives and start to move forward,” Schreeder said in an update broadcast
on Facebook.
While Sonoma County scrambles, eastern neighbor Napa County began to relax a little, as the fires did not appear to be spreading much there, officials said Saturday. There were no new evacuations, but authorities warned that the high winds and low humidity required continued vigilance.
“This morning I woke up and saw blue skies, but I can tell you I’m not the same person I was on Sunday,” said Belia Ramos, a member of the county board of supervisors. “None of us are. That takes a toll on everybody.”
Six people have been confirmed dead in Napa County, and there are 74 open missing persons cases, officials said. They warned residents returning to their homes not to clean up the debris because it probably contains toxic materials. Debris removal should be left to government crews, they said.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency has begun taking applications for individual assistance grants, but officials advised homeowners to seek compensation from their insurance companies first.
Amid the heartache, there was some good news for one Santa Rosa family. Jack Weaver, returning to the scene of his family’s destroyed home on Tuesday, found his parents’ dog Izzy alive.
“When she came exploding out, that was an incredibly gratifying moment,” Weaver, 37, said of the moment they found the 9-year-old Bernese mountain dog in a phone interview on Saturday.
Weaver’s parents, Clint, 68, and Kathy, 62, escaped the fire that destroyed their home on Monday. As they evacuated, Izzy bolted in another direction and was left behind.
“We didn’t believe she would’ve survived,” Weaver said.
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