LA fire evacuees told stay away from toxic areas and possible landslides
By Chad Terhune and Rollo Ross
Los Angeles: Officials have told people who have fled the Los Angeles fires to stay away from their homes for at least another week as emergency responders remove toxic waste from incinerated neighbourhoods and cut off electricity and gas lines posing a hazard amid the ruins.
Landslides are further endangering the devastated hillsides, where levelled structures no longer hold the soil in place and water from fire hoses and broken pipes has saturated the ground, adding more stress and heartache to people suffering the worst natural disaster in Los Angeles history.
The New York Times reported that soon authorities would issue “hazard maps to help people prepare for what comes next: the near-certain threat of floods and landslides that will loom for days, months and even years while the city recovers”.
With fires burning for a 10th day, firefighters were relieved the region withstood the red flag conditions of high desert winds and low humidity issued this week without either of the two monster fires growing.
But the National Weather Service warned the respite of ocean breezes and cloud cover would be short, as hazardous fire weather is forecast to return on Sunday.
Frustrated evacuees are eager to return home to assess the damage and salvage any keepsakes or medicine, but officials said it was too dangerous or too taxing on first responders who were still dealing with the immediate disaster, which has killed at least 25 people.
“You can see the emotional toll that this disaster has taken on people, as I spoke to people who had lost their homes or who were not sure the status of their homes or missing pets. The toll you can see mounting on them,” Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said.
The Palisades Fire on the west side of Los Angeles has consumed 96 square kilometres and was only 22 per cent contained, meaning firefighters had control of that percentage of the perimeter.
The Eaton Fire, which has burnt 57 square kilometres in the foothills east of town, was 55 per cent contained, Cal Fire said.
Together the two fires have charred 152 sq km – an area larger than Paris or nearly three times the size of Manhattan. A series of smaller fires in the Southern California region have been brought completely or mostly under control.
At least 12,000 structures – many of them homes – were levelled or damaged, leaving 82,400 people still under evacuation orders and another 90,400 under evacuation warnings.
Some people defied evacuation orders and perished. Others found it impossible to abandon distressed neighbours and fought the flames with buckets.
John Carr said he stayed in his home in Pacific Palisades to protect it because rebuilding would be too expensive. As the fire began to encroach on his backyard, Carr said he sprang into action, jumping fences to tackle spot fires from all directions using his hose, not only on the flames but also himself.
“I was awake all night, all day. I got a little bit of sleep after things calmed down a little bit, after all the houses all burned down. I did probably hurt a rib jumping a fence over there,” Carr said. “Some things in life are worth fighting for, you know.”
Los Angeles County officials said some people in evacuation zones would be let home sooner but for others it may take even longer than a week, as officials attempted to recover and identify charred human remains.
“There are areas that we are holding because we believe there may be deceased victims there. We have to hold for the right time and the right resources to process the scene correctly, and that’s going to take a little while,” Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said.
Damaged or destroyed homes are loaded with hazardous materials, which must be removed by the US Environmental Protection Agency before local agencies can haul away debris and restore severed utilities.
The massive amounts of debris and toxic material will have damaged or clogged the region’s flood control system, which will need to be cleared before badly needed rains return after what so far has been nine months of dry weather, said Mark Pestrella, director of Los Angeles County Public Works.
Police had experimented with escorting people to their homes for brief visits but found it obstructed streets needed for firetrucks and consumed the time of too many officers, Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonnell said.
Beyond the immediate clean-up, state and local officials are preparing for a massive reconstruction effort by suspending regulations that might cause delay.
California State Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas stood with more than 20 lawmakers in a fire-ravaged area to announce a slate of new and forthcoming bills aimed at fire recovery, the LA Times reported. He said legislative efforts would focus on housing.
Private forecaster AccuWeather projects damage and losses at more than $US250 billion ($402 billion), which would make the Los Angeles fires the costliest natural disaster in US history.
The devastation has also complicated the city’s preparation to host major sporting events such as part of the 2026 World Cup, the 2027 Super Bowl and the 2028 Olympic Games. Experts say a relocation of the Olympics would be unlikely.
Reuters