Southern California wildfire burns homes and businesses: 'We suffered great damage'
VENTURA, Calif. ? Firefighters were gaining ground Monday on a wildfire that raced across more than 32 square miles north of Los Angeles, damaged or destroyed almost 250 homes, businesses and other structures and continued to "creep and smolder" in steep rugged terrain.
The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said the blaze was 42% contained Monday and remained a threat to critical infrastructure, highways, and communities. The size of the fire has held steady at around 20,630 acres since Thursday evening.
Favorable weather conditions aided the effort to construct control lines. The National Weather Service warned winds would reach 20-30 mph Monday afternoon with gusts of up to 40 mph, still well short of those that initially spread the fire last week.
The cause of the ferocious fire, which ignited Wednesday and was fanned by winds of up to 80 mph, remained under investigation. Six injuries have been reported. Ventura County Fire Chief Dustin Gardner, at an emotional public meeting Sunday night, lauded the "heroic" response of firefighters.
“I am grateful for the number of lives that were saved and the fact that we have zero reported fatalities,” Gardner said to applause, adding: “I know we suffered great damage, but thousands of homes were saved and hundreds of lives were rescued."
Some evacuation orders lifted
Gardner said the first firefighters on the scene worked for 30 hours without rest. More than 1,000 firefighters were battling the blaze within 24 hours, and on Monday more than 2,800 firefighters from across the region were on the fire lines.
Some mandatory evacuation orders remained in effect Monday, but he said some residents were being allowed to return to their homes.
"I know we made mistakes, but we will learn from those mistakes," Gardner said. "We can rebuild, we can recover, and we will heal."
Firefighters make progress: But Southern California wildfire rages on
Some farmers lost crops, farm buildings ? and homes
Agricultural damage estimates from the fire reached $2.4 million and are expected to climb. Ventura County Agricultural Commissioner Korinne Bell said surveys done late last week showed avocado, citrus and berry crops as the hardest hit. The losses can include those directly tied to crops and trees, but also infrastructure from fences and irrigation lines to outbuildings, she said. The blaze ignited on South Mountain, and Santa Ana winds drove the fire into agricultural fields.
Some farmers also lost homes, said Maureen McGuire, the Ventura County Farm Bureau’s CEO. Many were "out in their orchards trying to reduce the impacts of the fire on their operations and their outbuildings,” McGuire said.
First rain in weeks won't solve Northeast drought
A smattering of rain across parts of the Northeast failed to douse the deep drought fueling wildfires and prompting fire warnings across much of the parched region where blazes turned deadly over the weekend. Some areas received the first measurable rain in more than a month Sunday night into Monday morning, but the fire risk was forecast to continue Tuesday and beyond, AccuWeather said.
The National Weather Service in New York said most of the tri-state area ? New York, New Jersey and Connecticut ? received 0.15-0.30 inches of rain. That is not a lot, but it was the most rain since late September.
"The rain has moved east and now dry conditions can be expected through much of the week, with only a slight chance of rain Thursday night," the weather service said.
Fires popping up on East Coast: Why have wildfires been erupting across the East Coast this fall?
No break from risk of fire
A string of warm days, falling humidity and stronger winds were expected to combine with dry brush and fallen leaves to keep fire danger high in the Northeast, though the rain was enough to lower the risk for central New Jersey to moderate, at least temporarily. The state fire danger dashboard had the entire state under an extreme risk warning in recent days.
Fires burning in northern New Jersey and New York continued to rage, claiming their first victim over the weekend. New York State Police said state parks employee Dariel Vasquez, 18, was killed Saturday as he helped battle a fire in the Sterling Forest. Officials said a tree fell on Vasquez while he was clearing trees and brush.
The Jennings Creek Wildfire had expanded to 3,500 acres and was 20% contained, according to an update around 7 p.m. Monday from the New Jersey Forest Fire Service, which is sharing command duties with New York state forest fire authorities. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said Monday afternoon that no buildings or infrastructure were threatened and 277 personnel were battling the blaze.
Jesse Dwyer, a supervisor in the town of Warwick, N.Y., said Monday that no mandatory evacuation has been ordered.
"Although the rain was helpful in slowing things down, it was not enough," Dwyer said in a Facebook post. "Please continue to pray for our responders and the residents in the immediate area as we continue to deal with this situation."
'Climate change is real': New York parks employee killed as historic drought fuels blazes
Milestone: 2024 'virtually certain' to be warmest year on record
Another year, another heat record
Since early this year, climate scientists have been saying 2024 was likely to be the warmest year on record. Ten months in, it's now "virtually certain," the Copernicus Climate Change Service says. This is also poised to be the first full year when global average temperatures are at least 2.7 degrees above pre-industrial levels, said Samantha Burgess, deputy director of the Climate Change Service. World leaders and climate scientists had hoped to stay below that mark in the quest to curb rising temperatures.
“This marks a new milestone in global temperature records and should serve as a catalyst to raise ambition for the upcoming Climate Change Conference, COP29,” Burgess said. The conference starts Monday in Azerbaijan. The previous hottest year on record was 2023.
? Dinah Voyles Pulver
(This story has been updated to add new information.)
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Southern California wildfire burns hundreds of homes and businesses