The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department arrested a man Tuesday in connection with the Line Fire ravaging southern California since Sept. 5.
Three rapidly growing Southern California wildfires have burned more than 100,000 acres in less than a week and continued to threaten homes in multiple communities as the state mobilized an all-hands-on-deck response to bolster front-line fire crews battling the raging flames.
Fueled by a punishing heat wave and fanned by gusting winds, the biggest blaze is the Bridge Fire, which ignited Sunday in the Angeles National Forest about 31 miles east of downtown Los Angeles and exploded overnight from about 4,000 acres on Tuesday to nearly 48,000 acres by Wednesday morning, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
The fire remained out of control with 0% containment after spreading across Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties. Authorities issued widespread evacuation orders as the fire tore through the towns of Wrightwood and Mt Baldy, destroying at least 33 homes, several cabins, and racing through a ski resort.
At least 33 homes in Wrightwood and Mt. Baldy have been destroyed and another 2,500 structures in the area are being threatened by the fire, according to Cal Fire.
This is every dumbass right wing talking point. Cali has the largest fleet of firefighting aircraft in the world. We have been deploying night time attack helicopters, we recently finalized like 5 new C-130 conversion craft (on top of our 747s, DC-10s and other various attack craft) that drop 4000 gallons of retardant and we have propositioned personnel across the state in strategic locations so they can water drop on any fire within 20 minutes. We’re a massive state with a ton of federal lands so cutting in the woods isn’t really a California thing. We’re burying power lines, but a lot of these fires recently have been dry lightening. We don’t really use watch towers since we have a system of cameras positioned on peaks all across the state that monitor for us. We have more firefighters and keep them on payroll year round. These fires down in SoCal happen frequently due to Santa Ana winds which is a dry (like 10% humidity), hot and fast wind that whips over the mountains. People in flat states or humid ones act like we just twiddle are thumbs at this but the state is just an environment that constantly caught on fire, and the weather and topography make those fires grow faster and burn hotter. Not to mention the eucalyptus that colonizers brought over that spontaneously combusts.
It’s a little ranty/ramble-y, but fire risk is something we’re use to here. It isn’t new to us.
I remember the first time I ever felt the Santa Ana winds (having lived near Irvine), that shit was sooo hot and dry, like literally nothing I've ever felt, even having been in Dubai during the summer.
Think riding a bicycle straight into a giant hair dryer in the desert at full blast. I ride a lot over long distances, but head on, the hot wind was powerful enough to make me stand out of my saddle consistently.
It’s not meant to be a right wing talking point. It’s an honest question. (It’s not like I asked if they were going to rake the forest leaves like Donny dumbasss.)
This problem isn’t going away and I haven’t seen any progress in either the fires lessening in intensity or in the media reporting of California making any changes/updates. It just feels like we’re not making much progress.
I do appreciate the sincere list of changes you listed. I was surprised you mentioned that power lines were being buried because the last thing I read was that it’s just business as usual over at PG&E.
Dropping fire retardant sounds like a necessary evil I guess. I have no idea if the stuff they are using still contains pfas or something else we will regret later. I’d still like to see them cut fire lanes. It’s an older preventative, but it helps. I’m not a fan of controlled burns because they get out of hand too often and do more harm than good.
My grandpa worked as a watchman in a fire watchtower in a southern US forest. You never hear about that being a job anymore — that’s why I asked. I guess it makes a lot more sense these days to station cameras everywhere and monitor them remotely.