Firefighters making great progress on LA blaze 

Published: 8:34AM Friday September 04, 2009

Source: Reuters

Firefighters making great progress on LA blaze (Source: Reuters)

Source: Reuters

Firefighters taking the offensive against a nine-day-old wildfire in the mountains near Los Angeles focused on steering flames away from newly menaced communities as they made more headway enclosing the blaze.

Containment of the so-called Station Fire increased to 38%, up from 28% a day earlier, according to fire commander Mike Dietrich, who said his force of more than 4,700 firefighters was making "great progress."

But the amount of scorched landscape grew slightly, also, to nearly 59,000 hectares - or about 585 square kilometres, almost exactly the size of Chicago.

The blaze, roaring out of control since August 26 in the rugged San Gabriel Mountains overlooking the Los Angeles basin, had prompted authorities to order the evacuation of some 6,300 homes at the height of the fire threat.

As of Wednesday night, the all-clear had been given for the last of those foothill residents to return home.

But a flare-up in one canyon early on Thursday led officials to order a small cluster of homes evacuated, and fire crews were concentrating their attack on the southeastern flank of the blaze to prevent flames from spreading into several foothill communities below.

"That's our No. 1 priority for the next several days," Dietrich said late on Wednesday.

One town on the fire's southeastern fringe is Pasadena, known for its annual New Year's Day Rose Bowl college football game and Tournament of Roses Parade. Fire commanders scheduled a town meeting for Thursday night to brief Pasadena residents on the situation.

Meanwhile, fire commanders expressed confidence that key facilities on Mount Wilson, home to a world-famous observatory and a telecommunications and broadcasting hub for the region, would be spared from damage.

Days earlier, authorities had been predicting the 1,740-metre peak was virtually doomed to be engulfed in a firestorm. But subdued fire activity attributed to rising humidity gave fire crews time to launch a renewed, all-out campaign to clear dense brush around the mountain and to treat the slopes with heavy doses of fire retardant.

Despite progress made in the past three days, fire officials said they expect they will need until mid-September to achieve full containment.

The blaze has destroyed more than 60 homes, killed two firefighters and cost $21 million to battle so far, making it the most expensive of several California wildfires in recent weeks that already have more than half-depleted the cash-strapped state's emergency firefighting budget.

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who paid his third visit this week to the fire zone, has insisted the state has plenty of resources at its disposal, including a newly created $500 million reserve funded primarily with social services cuts.

The aggressive use of aircraft to battle the Station Fire has contributed to much of its cost but also has been a key factor in the firefight's progress.

Dietrich said that helicopters and planes have dropped nearly 2.5 million gallons of water and fire retardant on the fire. Airplanes alone have dropped 670,000 gallons of fire-retardant chemicals.

"That's more than some of our permanent air tanker stations across the country drop in an entire year," Dietrich said.


Tools: Print     Text Size


Advertisement
 

20/20

Provocative, unflinching, Thursday 9:30pm

Back Benches

Back Benches - giving politics back to the people

Breakfast

The way New Zealand wakes up weekdays, 6:30am

Close Up

No one gets you closer, weeknights 7pm

Fair Go

Looking out for the little guy, Wednesday 7:30pm

Simon Dallow and Bernadine Oliver-Kerby (Source: ONE News)

ONE News team

Meet the people that bring you the news

NZI Business

TV ONE weekdays, 6am

(Source: TVNZ)

Q+A

The home of NZ politics - Sunday, 9am TV ONE

Sunday

Where there's a story, we'll find it, Sunday 7:30pm

Te Karere's new set (Source: ONE News)

Te Karere

Te Karere, Maori News - 4pm weekdays, TV ONE

Greg Boyed (Source: ONE News)

TVNZ 7 News

News on digital channel TVNZ 7

Tools: Print     Text Size

Provocative, unflinching, Thursday 9:30pm
Back Benches - giving politics back to the people
The way New Zealand wakes up weekdays, 6:30am
No one gets you closer, weeknights 7pm
Looking out for the little guy, Wednesday 7:30pm
Meet the people that bring you the news
TV ONE weekdays, 6am
The home of NZ politics - Sunday, 9am TV ONE
Where there's a story, we'll find it, Sunday 7:30pm
Te Karere, Maori News - 4pm weekdays, TV ONE
News on digital channel TVNZ 7

Advertising