A series of fires is continuing their destructive path through parts of Southern and Northern California. There is a small break in the winds Saturday to help firefighters, but then Sunday fire conditions are expected to be extreme. The San Francisco Chronicle reports:
The Camp Fire that devastated this bucolic Butte County town has claimed the lives of at least nine people, grown to 90,000 acres and destroyed more buildings than any other wildfire in California history.
By Friday evening, the fire had incinerated 6,453 homes and 260 commercial buildings in and around Paradise. The blaze was only about 5 percent contained and was threatening another 15,000 structures. Some 52,000 people remained evacuated from various towns. Authorities expect the death toll to increase in the coming days.
Within 24 hours, the Camp Fire burned more than 20,000 acres, and virtually destroyed the town of Paradise, California. https://t.co/lFTXJ0c00l pic.twitter.com/b1TfK45Va8
— The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) November 10, 2018
In Los Angeles County, the 35,000-acre Woolsey Fire was threatening 75,000 homes and more than 200,000 people were under mandatory evacuation early on Saturday.
The entire city of Malibu is under evacuation orders, after flames jumped the 101 Freeway and headed coastward, propelled by strong winds, reported ABC News.
Some of the evacuation orders were for residents within the City of Los Angeles in the West Hills area. It was unclear how many homes have been evacuated within the City of Los Angeles. According to Ventura County Fire Department, the county and Los Angeles County have been evacuated or are being evacuated of 148,000 residents.
Here’s Why the California Wildfires — Including Woolsey and Camp Fires — Are Spreading so Rapidly https://t.co/JCuRaXPdTy pic.twitter.com/hQBZistE9y
— KTLA (@KTLA) November 10, 2018
Watch more from CBS above.