The Latest: Power out 4th time in devastated California town

By Associated Press 25 October 2019, 12:00AM

GEYSERVILLE, Calif. (AP) — The Latest on the wildfires in California (all times local):

1 p.m.

The power is off to prevent utility company equipment from sparking wildfires for the fourth time in the Northern California town of Paradise since last November, where 85 people died in the fire that largely destroyed the community.

The town's Ace Hardware store is one of the few businesses open Thursday and motorists used to the outages are politely treating darkened traffic lights like four-way stop intersections.

Store manager Brenda Miller says she uses a wood stove for heat and battery-operated lanterns when the power is out.

She says she sympathizes with residents of wine country in Sonoma County as they flee a fast-growing wildfire.

Miller says: "They're leaving their homes, they don't know when they can get back in there, and it's a mess."

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12:40 p.m.

Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick says about 2,000 people are under evacuation orders from a fast-moving fire in Northern California's wine country.

The fire is bringing back memories of the devastating and deadly blazes that killed 44 in the area two years ago.

Essick says many people felt better prepared Thursday than they were two years ago, but that doesn't mean they should wait to leave.

Essick says officials have had problems with some people not wanting to evacuate. He says firefighters need to fight the fire rather than worry about rescuing people.

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection incident commander Mike Parkes says the fire started Wednesday night near the Geysers.

It is the world's largest geothermal field, with nearly two dozen power plants drawing steam from more than 350 mountain wells to create electricity.

__This version corrects the last name of the incident commander to Parkes, not Parks.

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11:30 a.m.

The head of California's state firefighting force says weather conditions have improved and that authorities hope to begin containing a big wildfire in Sonoma County's wine country by nightfall.

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Fire Chief Thom Porter told reporters Thursday that the agency has moved this year to preposition trucks when fire conditions are dangerous.

He says that allows firefighters to quickly control fires and that only one out of more than 600 in the state over the last two days has become significant.

The Sonoma County fire broke out late Wednesday and exploded to more than 15 square miles (39 square kilometers) due to extremely windy and dry weather affecting the state. In Sonoma County, Porter said 100 firetrucks were ready to respond.

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11:20 a.m.

California's utilities have been cutting power to areas to try to prevent their electrical equipment from starting fires but California's governor is criticizing the scale of the outages by the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. utility.

The outages Thursday cut off power for tens of thousands of customers for the second time this month.

Gov. Gavin Newsom says he's infuriated that California is world renowned for its high-tech industry but that residents must endure the power outages.

Newsom is a Democrat and is also urging people to respect utility workers as they do their jobs in the field.

PG&E CEO Bill Johnson said Wednesday that someone fired a pellet gun at a worker in California's northern Glenn County.

A big fire is in Northern California in the wine country of Sonoma County has burned at least three homes and prompted the evacuation of the town of Geyserville.

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11:15 a.m.

A resident of the Northern California community evacuated as a wildfire raged says he fled with his wife as flames surrounded both sides of their driveway.

Harry Bosworth said Thursday that he saw his barn in Geyserville catch fire as they drove away.

Hundreds of people in the Sonoma County wine country town were ordered to evacuate shortly before dawn.

The fire erupted late Wednesday and expanded to more than 15 square miles (39 square kilometers) by Thursday as morning powerful winds swept the region.

The mayor of the neighboring town of Healdsburg says a shelter with mental health counselors has been set up for those fleeing Geyserville.

Mayor David Hagele says the mental health counselors are needed because many evacuees are survivors of devastating wine country fires that killed 44 people two years ago and when many people lost their homes.

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9:50 a.m.

Flames are no longer visible from a wildfire in Southern California but mandatory and voluntary evacuations remain in place as Santa Ana winds gust through the region and create extreme fire risk.

The fire broke out early Thursday about 60 miles (97 kilometers) east of Los Angeles in the San Bernardino National Forest near the city of San Bernardino.

The U.S. Forest service says in a statement that firefighters have made good progress but have not established containment lines around the area where vegetation is still smoldering.

TV images have shown the scorched landscape with no flames apparent and little smoke.

The Forest Service says 80 homes are under evacuation in the city and a Red Cross shelter has opened at a high school.

Very dry air and strong winds are affecting much of California, including the wine county north of San Francisco Bay where a huge wildfire has forced evacuations and burned at least three homes.

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9:20 a.m.

A fire burning in Northern California's wine county is still growing.

But California Forestry and Fire Protection spokesman Jonathan Cox says winds that gusted as high as 70 miles (113 kilometers) per hour overnight have eased slightly since dawn on Thursday. That could help firefighters.

Officials ordered hundreds of people to immediately evacuate the town of Geyserville as the fire raged.

It's not clear whether the area was also affected by the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. utility's pre-emptive power shutoffs put in place to prevent the company's equipment from sparking fires.

An Associated Press photographer saw at least three burned homes in Sonoma County north of San Francisco.

Cox says it's too early for firefighters to assess the structures that have burned.

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8:35 a.m.

The Southern California Edison utility has cut power to more than 15,000 Southern California customers as gusty Santa Ana winds sweep parts of the region and raise the risk of wildfires.

The utility is also considering additional power cuts Thursday to more than 286,000 customers to prevent wildfires ignited by downed lines or branches blown into them.

The moves came as a fire rages in the wine country of Northern California's Sonoma County that has destroyed at least three homes and prompted the evacuation of the small community of Geyserville.

At least two fires have erupted in Southern California but they have remained small.

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8:25 a.m.

Mary Ceglarski-Sherwin and her husband Matt Ceglarski-Sherwin lost their rental home in the Northern California city of Santa Rosa during a series of deadly fires two years ago.

Early Thursday, they and their two dogs were evacuating from their new home in the community of Geyserville in Sonoma County's wine country with the 72-hour emergency kits they'd acquired during the last fire, they told the Santa Rosa Press-Democrat .

The Sonoma County Sheriff's Office issued orders for Geyserville's evacuation shortly before dawn as a wind-drive wildfire raged.

Mary Ceglarski-Sherwin says at 3 a.m. she told her husband "we gotta go, we gotta go; I can feel it changing."

She says they could feel the fire's heat and see its smoke when they headed for an evacuation shelter.

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7:30 a.m.

Northern California authorities have ordered the entire town of Geyserville evacuated as a wind-driven wildfire rages through the wine country north of San Francisco Bay.

The Sonoma County Sheriff's Office issued orders for immediate evacuation of the community shortly before dawn Thursday.

Geyserville has about 900 residents and is a popular stop for wine country tourists.

The fire erupted late Wednesday and exploded in size overnight to more than 15 square miles (39 square kilometers),

At least three homes have burned. There are no reports of injuries.

A statement from the sheriff's office says: "If you're in Geyserville, leave now."

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7:20 a.m.

An Associated Press photographer has seen three homes destroyed by a wind-driven wildfire that is raging through wine country in Sonoma County north of San Francisco.

The photographer reported Thursday that the homes burned in the community of Jimtown.

The fire erupted late Wednesday and expanded to more than 15 square miles (39 square kilometers) before dawn Thursday as powerful winds swept the region.

The Sonoma County Sheriff's Office says evacuations have been ordered but the number of people affected is not known. There are no reports of injuries.

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12:15 a.m.

Hundreds of thousands of Californians are without power for the second time in two weeks as dangerously windy weather prompts safety shutdowns.

Pacific Gas & Electric on Wednesday and Thursday cut power to about a half-million people from the Sierra foothills to portions of the San Francisco Bay Area.

Outages that could last 48 hours seek to keep gusts from pummeling power lines and sparking devastating wildfires.

Northern winds are expected to ease Thursday but pick up where Southern California Edison warned it might black out about 308,000 customers. San Diego Gas & Electric warned about 24,000 customers could lose power.

PG&E blacked out about 2 million people just two weeks ago, drawing criticism. The utility says outages were more targeted this time, but more are possible Saturday with dry gusts in the north.

By Associated Press 25 October 2019, 12:00AM

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