The sheriff’s office also issued a dire alert telling residents farther north of Santa Rosa to leave.
“The wind is really starting to pick up, as is the fire activity. If you are still in this mandatory evacuation area you need to leave now while you still can,” the sheriff’s office said.
The new orders dramatically expand the number of residents who will have to flee the growing fires and could further tax emergency workers tasked with helping them seek safety. Roughly 175,000 people live in Santa Rosa, and many of those residents may join the 90,000 people in Sonoma County who were already ordered to leave their homes Saturday night.
Gusts as high as 80 mph swept through the hills and valleys north of the San Francisco Bay area and could continue until at least the early afternoon. An “extremely critical” fire weather area, the National Weather Service’s highest category, was in effect in several counties north of San Francisco.
“The winds are on our doorstep,” the service wrote in a tweet Sunday morning.
Forecasters said low humidity and abnormally dry vegetation had created tinderbox conditions, which combined with the high winds, were “plenty supportive of extreme fire spread." Weather Service forecasters predicted winds would peak between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. local time before weakening some by Sunday late afternoon or evening. They also warned the dry, gusty winds would likely continue through Monday morning.
Early Sunday morning, authorities closed portions of Highway 101, the main north-south thoroughfare through the region, preventing traffic from the north and south from flowing into the hazardous fire area.
The Kincade fire outside Healdsburg, Calif. — which had consumed at least 26,000 acres and was only 11 percent contained as of early Sunday — appeared to be rapidly intensifying, according to the service, which posted satellite imagery of the blaze.
Flames from the Kincade fire, which was sparked Wednesday night, could be seen stretching hundreds of feet above the treetops, according to the Fire Weather Research Laboratory at San Jose University.
Officials, residents and emergency workers have spent the weekend bracing for the abrupt wind change, which came on almost exactly as forecasters expected. The fierce gusts, coupled with low humidity, could feed existing fires or ignite new blazes by knocking over electrical equipment or carrying embers into areas the flames haven’t yet touched. Any fires that do crop up will likely spread rapidly, the National Weather Service said.
Concerns about the fire expanding led Pacific Gas & Electric to conduct a massive power shutdown Saturday evening that will likely mark the largest planned outage in the state’s history. The blackouts, which will affect 38 counties in all, began in Northern California around 5 p.m. local time Saturday and cascaded south through the state throughout the evening, according to a statement from the company. Central California’s Kern County was slated to lose power at 9 p.m. Sunday. Fresno and Madera counties are also expected to lose power at some point, but PG&E hasn’t said when.
In total, in estimated 940,000 customers, comprising about 2.8 million people, are expected to be without power through the weekend. PG&E said its goal is to restore power to a “vast majority” of customers within 48 hours after the winds have died down.
The region has already experienced two years of incredibly destructive fires. The 2017 and 2018 California fire seasons brought the deadliest blazes in state history. As residents began to receive warnings of the Kincade fire’s imminent danger, some experienced uneasy flashbacks to the infernos that decimated parts of northern California wine country two years ago.
The bigger, more intense fires are part of a clear pattern, in which blazes are more frequent and stretch across a longer season. And, according to CalFire, “climate change is considered a key driver of this trend.” Population growth and the increase in homes and businesses located near lands that typically burn are also escalating the risk of and damage from wildfires in the Golden State.
Jason Samenow and Andrew Freedman contributed to this report.
Read more:
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Evacuation orders rapidly expand in California as wildfires spread in historic windstorm - The Washington Post"
Post a Comment