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103 missing – most of them senior citizens – in California’s Camp Fire, sheriff’s office says

Posted at 4:04 PM, Nov 14, 2018
and last updated 2018-11-14 18:04:07-05

BUTTE COUNTY, Calif. — More than 100 people are missing — most of them senior citizens — in Northern California’s Butte County as firefighters battle the Camp Fire, the most deadly and destructive wildfire in state history, the sheriff’s office says.

The Camp Fire is one of two major blazes burning in California that have left at least 50 people dead.

Most of the 103 peoplelisted missing by the Butte County Sheriff’s Office are from Paradise, a town of 27,000 north of Sacramento first ravaged by the fire Thursday morning.

More than a quarter of its residents are senior citizens and at least 73 of the missing are 65 or older.

“In an effort to better inform the public, this list of reported missing persons is being provided,” a message on the sheriff’s website says. “If you see anyone on the list who is no longer missing please contact us so their name can be removed.”

The Camp Fire has killed at least 48 people since it began last week, and Butte County Sheriff and Coroner Kory L. Honea said he expects more bodies will be found.

“I want to tell you, though, this is a very, very difficult process,” Honea told reporters Tuesday. “There’s certainly the unfortunate possibility that even after we search an area, once we get people back in there, it’s possible that human remains can be found.”

Authorities have requested that 100 National Guard troops join cadaver dogs, mobile morgues and anthropology teams in the grim search and recovery of human remains.

In Southern California, firefighters still are battling the Woolsey Fire, which so far has left at least two people dead in Malibu. Authorities are trying to determine whether a third person, found dead at a burned home in Agoura Hills, also died as a result of that fire, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said.

They’ve also been fighting a new blaze, the Sierra Fire, in San Bernardino County. It started late Tuesday about 50 miles east of Los Angeles near Rialto and Fontana, and by Wednesday morning had burned 147 acres, though no evacuations have been ordered, the San Bernardino County Fire District said.

Fire officials said the Sierra Fire was fanned by the Santa Ana winds — strong, dry winds that high-pressure systems push from east to west, from the mountains and desert areas down into the Los Angeles area.

Winds were “particularly strong” Wednesday morning but are expected to weaken by evening, the National Weather Service said.

Meanwhile in Northern California, forecasters have said the winds fueling the Camp Fire would slowly begin to decrease Wednesday and give firefighters a reprieve.

Residents desperate to come back

For hours, Carmen Smith waited Tuesday at a roadblock outside Paradise, hoping someone would help her get home and retrieve her husband’s medicine.

“I thought I was going to go home because I work at the hospital and we had to evacuate all the people, and I go, ‘Oh, I’m coming back home,’ but I did not know it was this bad,” Smith told CNN affiliate KCRA. “The fire was right there.”

Smith and others are wondering when they can go back to get medicine and clothing or simply to check on the damage.

“I don’t know what to do here,” Charles Terry told KCRA. “I need to get that stuff out of the house.”

Some residents have returned to what’s left of their gutted homes, but many have not. Authorities say downed power lines, busted gas lines and melted roads could endanger them.

California Highway Patrol Chief Brent Newman asked for the public’s patience as teams clear affected areas.

“It is not a safe environment whatsoever,” he said.

Authorities said they don’t yet know when residents will be able to get closer to their homes.

In Southern California, the Los Angeles County sheriff expressed empathy for residents waiting to return to the remains of the few hundred homes destroyed by the Woolsey Fire.

He took a helicopter tour of the burned areas and posted aerial photos of the destruction to Twitter.

“We see the frustration of (people) trying to get back into their homes & appreciate their cooperation,” Sheriff Jim McDonnell wrote.

A look at the wildfires’ astonishing numbers

• Camp Fire: The Camp Fire has destroyed 7,600 homes and scorched 135,000 acres in Northern California. As of Wednesday morning, the inferno was 35% contained.

• Woolsey Fire: This Southern California blaze has torched 97,620 acres and destroyed at least 483 structures. As of Wednesday morning, the inferno was 47% contained.

• Hill Fire: A second Southern California blaze has burned 4,531 acres and was94% contained as of Wednesday morning

• Rising death toll: There have been 50 deaths statewide, with the vast majority in Northern California. Southern California’s Woolsey Fire has claimed two lives.

• A devastating week for the Golden State: More than 230,000 acres burned in California in the past week. That’s larger than the cities of Chicago and Boston combined. And in 30 days, firefighters have battled more than 500 blazes, said Cal Fire, the state’s forestry and fire protection agency.

Federal officials visit

President Donald Trump received a briefing about the fires from Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Brock Long, who were in California.

The two officials told reporters the Camp Fire was one of the worst disasters they have seen.

Zinke also said this is not the time to cast the deadly fire in a political light or cast blame.

He said he wanted the focus to be on checking with families and residents, and to continue to work with state and local partners throughout the recovery phase.

“This is not just a state issue. It’s not a federal issue. This is an American issue of managing our forests,” he said.

Zinke cited several reasons for the increase in devastation including dead and dying timber and beetle infestation. He stopped short of blaming climate change.

He said prescribed burns are a start and that “the best scientists are looking at best practices.”

After viewing the decimated town of Paradise, Long said a lot of planning will go into reconstructing the town.

“This is a very complex disaster. Probably one of the most complicated disasters this nation has ever seen when it comes to Paradise,” he said.

Man used hose to save his Paradise home

Brad Weldon grabbed a garden hose as the Camp Fire approached his house last week, spraying water to keep the flames at bay and protect his disabled, elderly mother.

He had stayed in Paradise for his 89-year-old mother, who is blind and was unwilling to leave.

“There was times we were laying on the ground pouring the water on ourselves so we didn’t burn,” Weldon, 62, recalled Tuesday.

The water to the hose lasted four hours, and unlike many in the Northern California town, Weldon, his family and home survived mostly unharmed.

The house is remarkably unscathed, save for some scorching on the back of a work shed.

“It feels good to have it. I feel so sad for everyone, though. Everybody I know lost everything,” he said while crying for his neighbors.

Hundreds of thousands are displaced

More than 300,000 people have been forced from their homes statewide. Most of those live in Los Angeles County, where 170,000 were evacuated.

The evacuees included celebrities who lost their homesin Malibu as well as first responders who are still working despite their own homes being destroyed.

Thomas Hirsch was searching the burned remains of his childhood home Tuesday in Malibu, looking for anything salvageable. His parents — who are 97 and 94 — still live there and plan to rebuild, he said.

“We’re survivors. We’ll rebuild, we’ll come back and take whatever little insurance money they had, clean it off, rebuild it and make it nicer than it was before,” he said.

More than 9,000 firefighters are battling wildfires across California, including many from out of state.

Cal Fire tweeted a map showing all the states where firefighters are coming from — including Alaska, Indiana and Georgia.

“Cal Fire wants to recognize the many out of state partners that have joined in battling these wildfires,” the agency said.