From FOXNews.com
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SAN DIEGO — Firefighters in Southern California (search) were continued to battle devastating wildfires Tuesday morning that have killed 17 people and destroyed at least 1,134 homes in the state's deadliest outbreak of fires in more than a decade.
About 30,000 homes were still in danger from the fire, which had consumed more than half a million acres of dense, dry brush and trees.
Fifteen Californians were killed as of Tuesday by five separate blazes scattered around Southern California. Two more people were killed in Mexico.
The mounting daily cost of fighting Southern California's wildfires is draining the state's already stressed coffers as California's contribution could swell to $100 million.
"This will be the most expensive fire in California history, both in loss of property and the cost of fighting it," Dallas Jones, director of the state Office of Emergency Services, said Monday.
The flames dotted an area that extended on a 100-mile line from the Mexican border north to the suburbs of Los Angeles.
A handful of other fires that hadn't hit any homes also consumed tens of thousands of acres of brush and forest lands, bringing the total burned to more than 500,000 acres -- or about 780 square miles, roughly three-quarters the total area of Rhode Island.
"It's a worst-case scenario. You couldn't have written anything worse than this. You can dream up horror movies, and they wouldn't be this bad," said Gene Zimmerman, supervisor of the San Bernardino National Forest, the area in which two of the most destructive fires began last week.
A blaze in San Bernardino County called the Old Fire, which began near the forest on Saturday, has destroyed at least 450 homes and been blamed for the deaths of two people. It was 10 percent contained Tuesday. The Grand Prix Fire, which was 25 percent contained, has destroyed at least 77 homes since it ignited near the forest on Oct. 21.
One of the biggest fire fights on Tuesday was unfolding in the Santa Susana Mountains that separate Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley, where 1.3 million people live, from Simi Valley in neighboring Ventura County.
The Simi Valley fire, which has destroyed 13 homes since it began Saturday, was burning dangerously close to a gated community of million-dollar mansions in Los Angeles' Chatsworth section. It was only 5 percent contained.
Meanwhile, 90 miles away in San Bernardino County, the Old Fire and Grand Prix Fire, which merged earlier in the week, had jumped a highway and was moving as one contiguous wall of flames toward the mountain resort town of Lake Arrowhead. The town, which sits at an elevation of 5,100 feet, was left particularly vulnerable to flames by a beetle infestation that has devastated the surrounding trees.
"It is one of our major concerns at the moment," U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Carol Beckley said late Monday.
Officials were particularly concerned about "crowning," in which flames leap from one treetop to another, leaving firefighters on the ground all but powerless to stop them.
"If that occurs we don't have the capability to put those fires out," Beckley said. "It will be a firestorm."
Conditions were equally grim in San Diego County, where ash from three large fires fell on the beaches like snow and drivers had turn on their headlights during the day.
San Diego Fire Chief Jeff Bowman was worried that the fires would merge into one gigantic blaze, pushing already strained resources to the breaking point.
"It would be disingenuous to say we have control of these fires. Right now we are throwing everything we can at them," Dallas Jones, director of the state Office of Emergency Services, said of the San Diego blazes.
More than 10,000 firefighters were battling the flames, which by Tuesday had already cost the state more than $24 million.
The 15 people killed were the most since the devastating Oakland Hills fire that killed 25 people and destroyed more than 3,000 homes in October 1991.
Scores of people were also injured by this week's fires, including eight people treated for burns and smoke inhalation at the University of California, San Diego, Medical Center, on Monday. Two were in serious to critical condition with burns over more than 55 percent of their bodies, spokeswoman Eileen Callahan said.
The fires also knocked out power to tens of thousands of people, closed highways and disrupted air travel.
More resources were on the way from Arizona and Nevada, which were answering pleas for help from Gov. Gray Davis.
Each state has volunteered the use of 50 fire trucks, most of which are being directed toward the San Diego fires, Davis said. Nevada was also sending three helicopters.
On Monday, President Bush granted Davis' request to declare the region a disaster area, opening the door to grants, loans and other aid to residents and businesses in Los Angeles, San Bernardino, San Diego and Ventura counties.
"I believe at the local, state and federal levels they are doing their parts in this distress," Davis told The Associated Press.
The Democratic governor, who will leave office next month after being recalled, dismissed criticism from some Republican lawmakers that he could have asked for help sooner.
"It's not time for second guessing, but to pull their loads to get these fires out and checks in the hands of people who lost their homes," Davis said.
As the flames continued to rage out of control, every Californian seemed to know someone -- or know someone who knew someone -- who was affected by the fires.
U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Alpine, said his home was among hundreds damaged or destroyed in his mountain town.
Maurice Greene, a sprinter who won a gold medal at the 2000 Olympics, had to evacuate his 9,000-square-foot home near Simi Valley on Monday.
"We have to put it in God's hands. That's all we can do," he said as he left.
Posted by Muddy at October 28, 2003 07:58 AM | TrackBackMay God bless California with lots of rain....of course, that would probably cause mud slides but hey, that's all I've got. I'll pray for them anyway.
Posted by: mrs. muddy at October 28, 2003 06:18 PMWe DESPERATELY need rain here in southern California. I've been here since August 5th and haven't seen a drop. There is still a fire raging here at Camp Pendleton - within sight of my barracks. The smoke here in the 22 Area is so thick that we cancelled normal PT today and went to the gym. The family of one Marine I know had to be evacuated this weekend. There is ash falling in the air, especially down in San Diego.
Posted by: skywalker at October 28, 2003 08:17 PMDon't that just beat all! I'm looking out my window right now and I'm seeing the rain fall. Why is it the places that need the rain the most don't get any while others (like us here) get the rain we don't need at all.
Well, I tried reaching down inside myself right to the heart of my native American heritage and did a reverse rain dance but all I gave myself was vertigo and whiplash - don't ask. I'll keep trying but I can't promise anything. I'll see what more I can do though.
How much longer are you going to be there and aren't they evacuating anyone on base?
yea- i was driving to a concert on monday- and good god- it looks like a war zone- real bad- =( PRAY is all we can do
Posted by: kevin at October 29, 2003 06:07 PMYeah it sucks.Many discplaced folks. There is ash...well the last few days have been nice, temp in the 70s and what not. Hoefully, I will be in Budapest for grad school....pray for me people! I need a colder climate, CA is too hot.
Posted by: les at October 31, 2003 12:42 PMLes don't go to Budapest, I hear everyone there is Hungry. :-P
Posted by: muddy at October 31, 2003 04:31 PMPee U...Baby, that's just bad! :P
Posted by: mrs. muddy at October 31, 2003 06:31 PMI thought california was hot...until i came here. Now I think it is a very mild climate, especially when compared to Georgia or Parris Island. Right now, it is very cold here, I've been wearing a sweatshirt or my leather jacket the past couple days on liberty (we have sleeves down as far as cammies go right now.) Good luck in Budapest, my instructor is planning to go there in a few months and a classmate of mine has lived there, says good things about it.
The smoke and ash have dissipated here at the air station over the past couple of days, however MCAS Miramar was torn up pretty badly, along with San Diego (the city, not the county.) Luckily no homes at Miramar were lost, the base firefighters were able to contain it to the uninhabited areas of the base.
Posted by: skywalker at November 1, 2003 01:21 PM