The bored fire crew tried to hold back the flames of the rag.
Tired fire crews worked Sunday to put out wildfires that engulfed millions of acres in three western states, while dozens of people found in the crash are being searched for unaccounted for.
The fire has killed at least 23 people, and officials in Oregon, the worst hit in the past few days, have warned of the possibility of “mass casualties.”
Thousands of people have been pushed out of their homes as communities have been engulfed in flames, leaving nothing but rubbish without being burned. The blaze also spread mist across a wide area of the west coast, prompting officials to say the air quality on the planet was poor.
“It’s a revelation,” Oregon Democrat Senator Jeff Merkley said on the ABC program on Sunday, “this week.” “I drove 600 miles up and down the state, and I never escaped smoking. We have thousands of people who have lost their homes. I could never imagine this. “
The fire in Reg Reagan has already consumed more than a million acres and forced thousands to flee their homes. In addition to the record of 1 million acres burned in California and more than 1,000,000 acres burned in Washington state.
The National Weather Service said Sunday that air quality improvements could begin for some cities starting Monday.
Winds blowing inland from the Pacific Ocean, and chilly conditions on Saturday helped the crew make some progress on the fire, which Oregon Governor Kate Brown called a “one-time pay generation phenomenon.”
Mr Brown said it was clear the intensity of the forest fires was provoked by “complete fire storms” of conditions, including rapid wind speeds, high temperatures and decades of drought. For most of the past decade, about 500,000 acres have been burned, yet this week alone, he said, more than 10 million acres in the state have been burned.
“This is a wake-up call for all of us,” he said.
But Ms. Brown, who appeared on the CBS program “Face the Nation,” said the improvement in weather conditions on Sunday would give firefighters a chance to step in as they push the fire under control. “It gives our energetic firefighters a chance to get out and be active and build a content line.”
Despite Mr. Brown’s assessment, the National Weather Service issued a “red flag warning” due to the possibility of wind blowing and dry weather in nearby counties in southern Oregon and California. Gusts of up to 40 miles per hour could be seen in some areas, and forecasters said winds would “contribute to a significant spread of new and existing fires.”
“We can look forward to a challenging Sunday,” Oregon Senator Ron Wyden said.
Sunday’s warnings include Jackson County in Reg Reagan, where a fire broke out in the Talent and Phoenix communities in Alameda, burning hundreds of homes and killing at least five people. Jackson County officials said their list of missing people is about 500, although some have been found safe.
On Saturday, reg Reagan State Police announced that the state’s fire marshal, James Waker, had resigned after being put on administrative leave early in the day. The statement did not say why Mr Walker resigned. He was replaced by his chief deputy, Marina Ruiz-Temple.
President Trump is scheduled to visit McLean Park, California on Monday to be briefed on wildfires. Mr. Trump acknowledged the severity of the fire that spread across the coast. “I spoke with devotees in Washington Reagan, Washington,” he said late Saturday night. “They had nothing like that.”
Mr. Trump cited the lack of forest management as the driving force behind the fire outbreak, which sharply reprimanded officials on the West Coast.
“Now we have a hurricane over our states in the west that is climate change.” “This week,” said Washington Governor Jay Insley. Said in an interview on. “And we know that climate change works to make fires smoother, spread faster and more intense.”
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said it was important for the president to witness the devastation for himself. However, on CNN’s “State of the Union” program, he arrested Mr. Trump for trying to oust climate control laws, saying the administration has a “head in the sand” on environmental issues.
“This is not just about forest management or racking,” Mr. Garcetti said. “Anyone who lives here in California is clearly insulted, and he perpetuates this lie.”
A recent blaze on the west coast has killed at least 23 people.
They lived more than 10000 miles apart – one in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, northeast of Sacramento, the capital of California, the other in the wild valley east of Salem, the capital of Reg Reagan.
Josiah Williams, 16.
Wyatt Toffe, 13.
They were short-lived young victims of the Great Western Wildfire of 2020.
The arrival of the fire season in the American West always brings the fear of casualties, especially the elderly and the disabled, who cannot escape the flames.
But, the deaths, speed and ferocity of the fire speak to the deaths of two athletic teenagers, Josiah and Wyatt, that this year in California and Reg Reagan have burned a combined four acres, the number of acres.
As thick shington, reg Reagan and large parts of California have been gutted by smoking and thousands of people have been displaced, the fire has been the worst in decades due to climate change. As of Saturday, the fire in California had consumed 26 times more area than at the same time last year.
In the West this weekend, law enforcement authorities were stepping up cremated communities for missing persons. The fire has killed at least 23 people, with dozens more missing and the season of peak fires just starting in many parts of the west.
Although the fires in recent years have proved more deadly – a hurricane that destroyed the city of Paradise in California in 2018 and killed more than 80 people in a single night – each death obscures the trauma of reaching small communities where wildfires cause such incidents. Have become. Terror.
Jennifer Willin took her home from the only school in Little Barry Creek, California last week where Ash fell from a revelation orange sky, where she paired a Wi-Fi hotspot for her daughters’ remote classes. Hours later, his cellphone exploded with an emergency warning: evacuate immediately.
The next morning, about 1,200 people were swept away in Northern California, killing nine residents and destroying a school and almost every home and business, according to an official described as a “huge wall of fire.”
Mrs. Willin and her family fled to a shaky hotel room 60 miles away. In her panic, she forgot to grab the mask, but she also had hot spots with her daughter’s laptop and school books. On Monday, the two young women plan to meet with their teachers at Zoom to get some rest amidst the chaos.
Between the two tragedies, schools built for the coronavirus crisis are providing a fantastic form of stability for teachers and students, preparing for distance learning, which keeps many people connected and relaxes in the unexpected form of a virtual community.
“They are still able to stay in school,” Ms. “Even though the school burned to the ground,” Willin said.
Wildfire smoke, which may contain toxins from burned buildings, has been linked to serious health problems.
Studies have shown that while smoke waves increase the rate of hospital visits and many additional patients experience respiratory problems, heart attacks and strokes.
The health effects of wildfire smoke do not go away when the sky is clear. A recent study on Montana residents has suggested a long tail for wildfire smoke.
Research by Arit Landguth, an associate professor at the School of Public and Community Health Sciences at the University of Montana and lead author of the study, shows that “after asons of bad fires, a person will expect three to five times worse flu. Months later.
If you cannot leave a smoking area, the CDC recommends limiting exposure by keeping windows and doors closed while indoors and running air conditioners in recuperation mode so that outside air is not drawn into your home.
Portable air purifiers are also recommended, however, like air conditioners, they require electricity. If utilities cut off power, as has happened in California, those options are limited.
If you have energy, avoid frying foods that increase indoor smoke.
Experts say it is especially important to avoid cigarettes. It is also recommended to avoid strenuous outdoor activities when the weather is bad. When out, a well-equipped N95 mask is also recommended, even though it is in short supply due to the coronavirus epidemic.
Sarah Henders, a senior environmental health scientist at the British Columbia Center for Disease Control, said some other masks, especially tightly woven ones made from different layers of fabric, could provide “very good filtration”. .
Contributed by the report Mike Baker, Nicholas Bogel-Burrows, Thomas Fuller, Dan Levine And Kate Taylor.