Crime & Safety
Woolsey Fire Latest: Water Supply Threatened, 91K Acres Burned
The Santa Ana winds are expected to pick up even more Monday and may continue into this week as firefighters battle the deadly blaze.
Timelapse video shows the destructive #WoolseyFire spreading into Malibu, as seen from Venice Beach, about 20 miles away.
— Nightline (@Nightline) November 12, 2018
At least 31 people have died this week as massive wildfires continue raging across California. https://t.co/34Dt1lTSt7 pic.twitter.com/Ow3XMxr6VQ
MALIBU, CA – Santa Ana winds picked up again Monday and were expected to continue into Tuesday as firefighters battling the deadly Woolsey Fire in Los Angeles and Ventura counties worked to hold back the flames.
At last word from Cal Fire, at least 370 structures were destroyed and the total number of structures threatened remained at about 57,000. The blaze had burned 91,572 acres and was 20 percent contained, with full containment not expected until Thursday.
Two people have died and three firefighters have been injured battling the Woolsey Fire.
Find out what's happening in Malibufor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"We appreciate the cooperation of everyone in the community during this difficult time," a Ventura County Sheriff's Office spokesman said at a press conference Monday. "Conditions are changing rapidly, but we do have some good news. We’ve lifted evacuations in the areas of Thousand Oaks, Oak Park and Newbury Park."
Santa Ana wind gusts reached as high as 60 miles per hour in parts of Ventura County on Monday and heavy gusts could follow Tuesday, National Weather Service Meteorologist Curt Kaplan said. Winds in mountain areas could average 50-60 mph and gust to 70 mph Tuesday and foothill and coastal areas are expected to see 35-50 mph winds.
Find out what's happening in Malibufor free with the latest updates from Patch.
A Red Flag Warning remained in effect for Los Angeles and Ventura counties through Tuesday, when winds will be strongest in the mornings and early afternoons, giving firefighters a nightly reprieve, Kaplan said. That Red Flag Warning could be extended into Wednesday as winds could be stronger than earlier expected.
Related: SCE Investigated For Role In Woolsey Fire: Report
While most evacuation orders remained in effect, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department announced that repopulation has begun for Agoura Hills, Westlake Village, Oak Park, North Ranch, Newbury Park residents affected by the fire.
The California Highway Patrol re-opened the northbound and southbound Ventura (101) Freeway from Valley Circle Boulevard. Pacific Coast Highway remained closed to all traffic from the Ventura/Los Angeles County line to Sunset Boulevard.
More than 3,200 firefighters were assigned to the blaze and 22 helicopters worked from above, officials said. A total of 450 engines, 40 water tenders, 50 bulldozers, and 50 crews were sent into the battle, Cal Fire reported.
Firefighters also had to deal with a fast-moving brush fire along the 118 Freeway near the Los Angeles/Ventura county line, which burned 105 acres and forced the immediate evacuation of Box Canyon and Lake Manor residents. It was reported about 10 a.m. Monday and knocked down a couple hours later, with no injuries reported.
Meanwhile, the California Public Utilities Commission is investigating Southern California Edison for its possible role in the fire.
TAKE A LOOK: Flame retardant covers homes and streets in Malibu as they continue to battle the #WoolseyFire. The Southern California fire has burned 91,572 acres and is 20% contained https://t.co/NMmeY2bxLx pic.twitter.com/JaRrFlz2wZ
— KRON4 News (@kron4news) November 12, 2018
According to CPUC, electrical infrastructure may have suffered malfunctions near ground zero of the blazes two minutes before they began.
The agency is also investigating PG&E for its possible role in the Camp Fire in Butte County, which has burned 113,000 acres and resulted in at least 29 deaths.
Los Angeles County Fire Chief Daryl Osby said crews were working around the clock to build containment lines, knock down flare-ups and update damage numbers. Osby said there were flare-ups in several canyons as winds kicked up Sunday, but none outside the footprint of where the fire already had burned. Osby credited the Los Angeles Fire Department with keeping areas to the south, especially in Bell Canyon, "buttoned up" employing some 50 engines on the fire's flank to keep it from spreading south of Mulholland Highway into Pacific Palisades and Topanga Canyon.
Osby and others expressed frustration with residents who failed to evacuate, saying they were hindering firefighters, and urged residents to stay away.
He warned evacuating residents to be careful of landslides and to watch out for many downed power lines that could still be live.
And despite messages to the contrary on social media, officials are not escorting residents back into the evacuated areas to retrieve medications, Los Angeles Police Lt. Eric Bixler said.
A town hall meeting about the fire was held Sunday at Taft Charter High School and attended by hundreds of concerned residents from the west San Fernando Valley down to Malibu. The tense, standing room only crowd was given briefings by representatives of law enforcement, fire departments, school districts, utilities and politicians.
Sheriff's deputies have been put on 12-hour rotational shifts, with 500 to 600 deputies available to patrol the affected areas, Los Angeles sheriff's Chief John Benedict told the town hall crowd.
Benedict also said the badly burned bodies of two people were found inside a burned vehicle in a long driveway in the 33000 block of Mulholland Highway.
"It's the feeling of homicide detectives that the driver became disoriented and the vehicle was overwhelmed by the fire," Benedict said.
As of Sunday morning, the Woolsey Fire, in and around Malibu, had destroyed at least 175 houses, killed 2 people, and was only 10% contained: https://t.co/pKF0zvLtVv pic.twitter.com/KufS9PaZ02 — The New Yorker (@NewYorker) November 12, 2018
LATEST on #WoolseyFire: https://t.co/EUAcuK1kWb -91,572 acres burned; -20% contained; -370 structures destroyed; -57,000 structures threatened. pic.twitter.com/fkNvm2nEZi
— ABC News (@ABC) November 12, 2018
Questions were raised online and at the town hall regarding the possible danger of radioactive dust posed by the fire since it had burned through the former Rocketdyne site at the Santa Susana field. And many residents expressed frustration at not knowing when they would be able to return to their homes.
A representative from the state's Department of Toxic Substances and Control told the crowd that his office had sent a monitoring team to the area that found no evidence of radioactive ash posing a threat. He said the team would continue monitoring the site for problems. However the DTSC representative did not stay to take questions.
Malibu City Councilman Skylar Peak said residents can not re-enter Malibu for safety reasons until the mandatory evacuation order is lifted. He also asked those people to refrain from attempting to get back into Malibu by boat.
There are still about 3,500 students sheltered at Malibu's Pepperdine University, Benedict said, bringing an angry reaction from a number of Malibu residents who asked if resources were being diverted from protecting houses in Malibu to protecting Pepperdine University.
Los Angeles County Fire Chief David Richardson tried to quell the anger by explaining the situation at Pepperdine.
Related: CA Fire Evacuees Should Put Temporary Hold On Mail, USPS Says
"Pepperdine has a long-standing understanding with the county fire and sheriff's departments," Richardson said. "Pepperdine is a large facility that can support a large number of people. It was a viable option."
He also told the crowd that a ballpark figure for their return to Malibu was three to five days.
Another community meeting for Malibu-area evacuees was scheduled for Tuesday night at Santa Monica High School's Barnum Hall.
Chris Thompson of SCE said there were 13,000 customers who initially lost power, mostly in Malibu, and now that number has been reduced to 9,000.
He also said that it will take time to replace the telephone poles destroyed by the fire, especially in canyon areas. He said they will need to use a helicopter to bring in the new poles. "We can't just drive poles in on a truck to those areas," he said.
For residents waiting and watching to hear about their homes, law enforcement offered reassurances about patrol presence.
"Oh my God, I'm surrounded by fire." Woman faces harrowing drive as she attempts to flee the encroaching Woolsey Fire on the neighborhoods near Malibu Lake. The blaze has torched more than 83,000 acres and is only 10% contained. https://t.co/GyvtyWzqcH pic.twitter.com/6kimK0ISAE
— ABC News (@ABC) November 11, 2018
There were "zero incidents of looting or burglary in the affected areas," Bixler said.
Peak said more than 50 homes have been lost in the Point Dune area, and more than half the city was without electricity Sunday.
Officials said Malibu City Councilman and Mayor Pro Tem Jefferson "Zuma Jay" Wagner was recuperating at a hospital from conditions related to his unsuccessful efforts to save his home Friday night.
The fire began Thursday afternoon and has forced the evacuation of at least 75,000 homes and an estimated 265,000 people in both counties as it indiscriminately consumed multimillion-dollar mansions and mobile homes.
In Malibu, Pepperdine University said the school's Malibu and Calabasas campuses would remain closed through Thanksgiving. All Malibu schools in the Santa Monica Malibu Unified School District will remain closed until at least Thursday, the district announced. City officials said there will likely be intermittent power outages due to weather and fire conditions.
Fire information for Los Angeles County can be found at www.lacounty.gov/woolseyfire. Malibu also has established a website to update fire information at www.malibucity.org/woolsey.
The Conejo Unified School District, which includes parts of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, closed its schools for Tuesday after inspectors found that at least two schools required major clean-up.
The expected return of the winds led to the re-imposition of the Red Flag Parking Restriction Program, according to Los Angeles Fire Department spokeswoman Margaret Stewart, who warned that illegally parked vehicles will be towed.
Motorists should look for "No Parking" signs posted in the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones. For a map of those zones, go to www.lafd.org./news/woolsey-fire.
The Los Angeles City Fire Department sent more than 25 fire companies to battle the Woolsey Fire, Stewart said. The U.S. Forest Service has dispatched two crews numbering 32 people to assist, according to the department.
Orange County Fire Authority officials say they have sent 20 engines to assist with the fires, and firefighters have come in from off time to ensure that every OCFA fire station is adequately staffed.
Crews from other agencies, including Arizona, were also assisting in battling the massive blaze, helping to evacuate residents and providing traffic control.
The Federal Aviation Administration sent a tweet reminding drone operators that they could face severe civil penalties and potential criminal prosecution for flying drones over fire areas.
Meanwhile, firefighters made progress on the much smaller Hill Fire north of Malibu and south of Simi Valley. That wildfire, which has consumed about 4,500 acres and destroyed two structures, was 80 percent contained. No civilians or firefighters were killed or injured and full containment was expected Wednesday.
Governor Jerry Brown, responding to the Southern California fires and the Camp Fire in Northern California that has burned more than 100,000 acres and killed at least 29 people, announced Sunday he is requesting a "major disaster declaration" from President Donald Trump, in addition to an earlier emergency declaration signed by Trump that will provide federal funds to aid firefighters.
Approval of such a declaration would provide funding to support housing, counseling, crisis management and infrastructure recovery efforts.
President Trump tweeted Monday morning, "The California Fire Fighters, FEMA and First Responders are amazing and very brave. Thank you and God Bless you all!"
City News Service contributed to this post; PHOTO: MALIBU, CA - NOVEMBER 11: A helicopter drops flame retardant on a wildfire on November 10, 2018 in Malibu, California. The Woolsey fire has burned over 70,000 acres and has reached the Pacific Coast at Malibu as it continues grow. (Photo by Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images)
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