Evacuations grow as Los Angeles area fire rages

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – A wildfire raged in the  mountains north of Los Angeles yesterday, sending up huge  plumes of purple-gray smoke and prompting the evacuation of  more than 3,000 homes on the northeastern edge of the city.

The fire, which had scorched nearly 20,000 acres (8,000  hectares) by late afternoon, also threatened key  telecommunications facilities, including TV and radio  transmission towers.

The blaze, which broke out on Wednesday afternoon in the  San Gabriel Mountains near the exclusive suburb of La Canada  Flintridge, was spreading toward homes from Pasadena to the San  Fernando Valley by late yesterday.

Residents in the northernmost reaches of Glendale and La  Crescenta were told to get out of their homes on Saturday  afternoon, as the mandatory evacuation zone reached the eastern  limits of the city of Los Angeles.

Evacuation zones included a hilltop subdivision just across  a canyon from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The fire broke out on Wednesday afternoon and was just 5  percent contained as of early Saturday, according to Los  Angeles County Fire Department Captain Mark Savage.

Firefighters were trying to keep the blaze from reaching  Mount Wilson, which houses key television and radio  transmitters, as well as towers that handle emergency services  dispatches.

Serious injury,
cabins burned

In the mountains, one person was badly burned when power  lines fell on a ranger station in Big Tujunga Canyon. The  victim, who was not identified, was airlifted out of the  freshly evacuated canyon, home to 75 cabins and numerous  campgrounds, local media reported.

Up to 34 of those cabins have been destroyed by fire in  the canyon, according to Angeles National Forest spokeswoman  Randi Jorgensen.

“This is a very dangerous situation that we are in right  now,” said US Forest Service fire boss Mike Dietrich. “We had  overnight growth up toward the La Canada area, which has  prompted additional evacuations there.”

Southern California Edison, the utility that supplies power  to the region, said it had de-energized two major power lines  because of the fire.

Edison spokesman Gil Alexander said the outages were not  affecting the utility’s ability to service customers.

The city of La Canada Flintridge said 164 houses near a  country club were blacked out until it was safe for Edison  crews to enter the area.

A National Weather Service spokesman said the agency’s  automated Los Angeles radio station went off the air at midday  due to burned power lines.

Angeles National Forest spokesman Robert Brady said on  Friday that it could take a week to contain the flames, which  have been helped by hot, dry weather with temperatures higher  than 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 Celsius).

“If there was one silver lining, there are no Santa Ana  winds predicted at this point,” Dietrich said.

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger on Friday  declared a state of emergency for Los Angeles and Monterey  counties due to wildfires that had burned 13,000 acres (5,200  hectares).

Acting Governor John Garamendi yesterday added northern  California’s Mariposa County to the emergency list after a  wildfire there consumed about 3,400 acres (1,376 hectares),  also threatening homes and closing roads.