Cooler weather helps crews fight wildfires in Southern California
September 18, 2007
FAWNSKIN, Calif. – Aided by cooler weather, firefighters in Southern California were gaining ground on two wildfires that raged through brush left dry by high summer temperatures.
A change in wind direction Sunday helped crews begin containing a 15,433-acre – or more than 24 square mile – wildfire in the San Bernardino National Forest that left hundreds evacuated from homes and two major roadways closed.
The fire was burning in a northwest direction away from the resort mountain community of Big Bear Lake, Forest Service spokeswoman Norma Bailey said.
About 340 residents of the Fawnskin area remained evacuated Sunday night but another 1,200 who voluntarily left their homes in Green Valley Lake have returned, Bailey said.
Highway 38 remained closed from Big Bear Dam to the Stanfield Cutoff, Bailey said, while Highway 18 was shut down from the dam to Running Springs. Six schools in the Bear Valley Unified School District canceled classes Monday as a precaution, affecting 3,200 students.
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Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger had declared a state of emergency for San Bernardino County on Saturday, clearing the way for state government assistance with costs related to the fire.
In eastern San Diego County, a wildfire northeast of Julian had burned 1,300 acres, or more than 2 square miles, authorities said Sunday. The fire, which authorities said was started by an illegal campfire, was 60 percent contained.
The blaze led to the evacuation of about 400 people from the nearby subdivision of Whispering Pines. Residents in the southern part of the subdivision were allowed back in their homes Sunday after evacuating Saturday.
One vacation home was destroyed and five outbuildings were damaged. Full containment was expected by Tuesday.