Thứ Sáu, 16 tháng 11, 2018

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As of Wednesday, at least 56 people have been killed by the deadliest wildfire in California's

history.

Called Camp Fire, it started last Thursday in Butte County, in the north of the state.

It's led to 56 fatalities, left a hundred and 30 missing and incinerated more than 89-hundred

homes and buildings.

To the south, near Los Angeles, another blaze called the Woolsey Fire, has led to three

deaths, displaced some 200-thousand people and scorched 398 square kilometers of hills

and canyons.

Officials have yet to determine the causes of the fires,... but they are looking into

signs that something went wrong at utility companies near the fires' ignition points.

For more infomation >> Death toll rises to 56 in California's deadliest wildfire - Duration: 0:42.

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Country Music Awards honor California shooting victims, Carrie Underwood teases baby's gender - Duration: 1:35.

For more infomation >> Country Music Awards honor California shooting victims, Carrie Underwood teases baby's gender - Duration: 1:35.

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Devastating California Wildfire Didn't Start At Campsite - Duration: 1:19.

For more infomation >> Devastating California Wildfire Didn't Start At Campsite - Duration: 1:19.

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Animals headed to Oregon from fire-ravaged California - Duration: 2:33.

For more infomation >> Animals headed to Oregon from fire-ravaged California - Duration: 2:33.

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Sube a 60 la cifra de muertos por los incendios en California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:19.

For more infomation >> Sube a 60 la cifra de muertos por los incendios en California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:19.

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Bomberos luchan para detener el fuego en California | Un Nuevo Día | Telemundo - Duration: 3:53.

For more infomation >> Bomberos luchan para detener el fuego en California | Un Nuevo Día | Telemundo - Duration: 3:53.

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Despiden con honores al sargento que murió en la masacre en California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:47.

For more infomation >> Despiden con honores al sargento que murió en la masacre en California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:47.

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California Wildfires Update: Thursday, November 15, 2018 - Duration: 3:34.

Hello everyone I'm Shawn Boyd in the state operation center here at Cal OES

headquarters outside of Sacramento. As of today there are over ninety-four-hundred

firefighters fighting fires in California, fires that have burned almost

a quarter of a million acres. Here's the latest on the three largest fires

starting with the Camp Fire in Butte County. It has already become the most

destructive and deadliest wildfire in California history. It's burned over

140,000 acres, containment is now up to 40%. Over 10,000 structures destroyed, 56

confirmed fatalities with still more than a hundred missing. The Woolsey fire

covering both Ventura and Los Angeles counties is now closing in on a

hundred-thousand acres, containment up to 57% and now three confirmed fatalities.

And firefighters continue to make great progress on the hill fire also in

Ventura County, the Hill Fire now almost fully contained. There are over 1,100

fire engines now on these fires, of those nearly half are local government engines

from all over the state, 18% are mutual aid and have come from over a dozen

states from all across the country. Cal OES engines make up 17% of the force

with CAL FIRE and federal engines rounding out the total. And now a quick

update on shelters in Butte County. The American Red Cross will take over the

operation of the shelter at the Glenn County Fairgrounds starting Friday

November 16th, overall there are nine total shelters and one on standby for

the Camp Fire, that information can be found at WildfireRecovery.org. For

survivors of the campfire a disaster recovery center will open on Friday

November 16th. The center will be located at the former Sears store in the Chico

mall. 1982 east 20th Street in Chico, the center will be open from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.

seven days a week, the disaster recovery center will have information

and resources for homeowners, renters and business owners who sustained damage as

a result of the Camp Fire. The California Highway Patrol has been providing mutual

aid since the beginning with traffic control highway closures and law

enforcement. The CHP is working with the Butte County Sheriff's Department and

Paradise to help clear roads and highways of vehicles that were caught in

the fires. They're safety hazards and once on tow trucks will be moved to a

staging area. They tell us they're all working well together it's team work

made better through relationships they've already forged. JOE PHIPPS / CHP INVESTIGATOR: "We work very well

with the local law enforcement so that team work early on we come up here we

know people face-to-face we know the communities and we can step in and fill

whatever role they need us to do." Now they're also checking cars for the

remnants of valuables left behind though at this point they may only have

sentimental value. Now if you need additional information on assistance

shelter or recovery you can find all of that information up-to-date and more on

our website wildfirerecovery.org. For all of us here at Cal OES and all of our

partner agencies working hard for you behind us, I'm Shawn Boyd,

Thanks for watching.

For more infomation >> California Wildfires Update: Thursday, November 15, 2018 - Duration: 3:34.

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# fire The biggest fire in the history of California It happens right now - Duration: 4:15.

For more infomation >> # fire The biggest fire in the history of California It happens right now - Duration: 4:15.

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This is What Wildfires Look Like from Space - Duration: 1:40.

This is what wildfires look like from space.

Three fires are currently burning in California:

the Camp fire (125,000 acres) and the Woolsey and Hill fires (90,000 acres).

This picture, captured by NASA's Terra satellite, shows them sending smoke over and into the ocean.

Here's the Camp fire, captured by NASA's Landsat 8 satellite.

Active parts of the fire are highlighted with short-wave infrared light.

Wildfires are increasingly common in California, due to a growing population and Earth's warming climate.

In 2017, 1/4 of the state's people lived in moderate to high risk fire corridors.

In the last five years, California has seen three of its largest fires ever...

including Camp, the state's most destructive and deadliest fire ever.

More than 5.3 million acres of land have burned since 2013—roughly 5% of the entire state.

For more infomation >> This is What Wildfires Look Like from Space - Duration: 1:40.

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Death Toll Reaches 63 In California's Camp Fire, While 631 Unaccounted For - Duration: 2:50.

For more infomation >> Death Toll Reaches 63 In California's Camp Fire, While 631 Unaccounted For - Duration: 2:50.

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Los incendios en California siguen batiendo récords | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:41.

For more infomation >> Los incendios en California siguen batiendo récords | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:41.

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PG&E sued over California wildfires - Duration: 2:19.

For more infomation >> PG&E sued over California wildfires - Duration: 2:19.

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Paradise gone, wildfire evacuees faced with rebuilding their lives - Duration: 6:08.

JUDY WOODRUFF: The tally of death and destruction keeps growing in the Northern California wildfires.

Officials now confirm 56 dead, up to 300 missing, and 8,800 homes destroyed in and around the

town of Paradise.

Cat Wise reports from nearby Chico, where survivors have taken refuge.

CAT WISE: A Wal-Mart parking lot in Chico now home to hundreds of wildfire evacuees.

Donated clothes and shoes have piled up in what is now a tent city, with daytime temperatures

in the 40s.

Matthew Flanagan is one of many who fled from nearby Paradise last week when the Camp Fire

destroyed the town of 27,000 people.

MATTHEW FLANAGAN, Evacuee: There are more evacuees, more people running out of money

for hotels. And families, they're staying with people, but they can't stay there forever.

And we tried to get back up to see our houses yesterday, and they say it's going to be four

months. So Paradise is gone.

JENNIFER FITZGERALD, Evacuee: Everything I have ever known is gone. All my family and

friends, all their houses and businesses.

CAT WISE: Jennifer Fitzgerald is here with her daughter, 7-year-old-Brooklyn. Fitzgerald

worked as a house cleaner in Paradise, but her home burned and she didn't have renters

insurance.

Do you have any thoughts about the days ahead, what's going to happen to you?

JENNIFER FITZGERALD: No. I have no clue, none. What can I -- I can't really do -- there's

nothing to do. I mean, all the good -- all the jobs are closed right now in Paradise,

so I don't know what to do. It's hard.

CAT WISE: Last night, the two slept in a car borrowed from a friend.

JENNIFER FITZGERALD: I'm just kind of bouncing around right now, staying in this car with

my friends, at friends' house, family's house. It just depends where I'm at that day.

CAT WISE: And you have your daughter with you, Brooklyn, who's 7. How is she doing?

JENNIFER FITZGERALD: She's OK. I don't think she really kind of knows what's going on yet.

I mean, she does. But she keeps asking where her stuffs that and why she can't have it.

CAT WISE: Another woman, Loretta Goodwin, is caring for her grandson. She has nothing

left, and is relying on donated diapers and stuffed animals.

LORETTA GOODWIN, Evacuee: We really thought we were going to go back. We should have got

this, we should have got that. But, yes, it was heartbreaking.

CAT WISE: It will take years to rebuild this area. Like many others, Suzanne Kaksonen worries

how she will afford a hotel or other temporary housing in the meantime.

SUZANNE KAKSONEN, Evacuee: I just want to go home. I don't even care if there's no home.

I just want to go back to my dirt, you know, and put a trailer up and clean it up and get

going. Sooner, the better. I don't want to wait six months.

CAT WISE: This makeshift shelter has so far been supplied and staffed by volunteers only.

But winter weather will only worsen the conditions here.

MAN: It's going to start raining shortly, and this is unsustainable if it's raining.

CAT WISE: The mental and physical health of evacuees are a growing concern as well. A

layer of thick smoke still hangs over Paradise and surrounding communities. Officials say

the ash and mix of toxic chemicals has created hazardous air quality conditions for the survivors.

Meanwhile, fire crews are making progress. They have now contained 40 percent of the

Camp Fire. And recovery teams continue searching the charred debris for bodies, with scores

of people still missing.

In Southern California, more than half of the fast-moving Woolsey Fire that burned through

Malibu is now within containment lines. But just 35 miles northwest of Malibu, still another

fire broke out this morning in the hills near Saticoy.

President Trump will visit California on Saturday to meet with people displaced by the wildfires

-- Judy.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Cat, we see you're still at that Wal-Mart parking lot. You talked to so

many people today. We heard from some of them just now. But what are some of the other people

saying that you have talked to? What are they facing?

CAT WISE: That's right, Judy.

We're still here at the Wal-Mart parking lot. And, frankly, the people we were meeting with

today, many of them didn't have much before the wildfires, and they're really struggling

now. We met with one older gentleman who told us he was a Vietnam vet and has COPD.

He's really having a tough time of it now with the smoky air. For the most part, this

camp has been run by volunteers. It is a bustling place at this point. But we're told by one

of those volunteers who has, frankly, been here for almost a week that they're a bit

frustrated that there hasn't been more of a government presence here.

We learned a short while ago that they're actually going to be closing down this camp

on Sunday, and part of the reason for that is they're very concerned about weather that's

expected next week. It's expected to rain, and these tents behind me are actually in

an area, I'm told, that floods after rain events.

So they're going to be trying to shift people into Red Cross shelters around the area.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Is it surprising that there isn't government help, that this is all volunteer

at this point? Because I would think these people are in need of so many things.

CAT WISE: That's right, Judy.

I mean, that's the case at this particular location. We just spoke a short while ago

with a Butte County spokeswoman, who told us there have been plenty of donations. In

fact, they're overwhelmed in many locations with donations.

But at this point, they really need financial contributions, and they steered to us three

organizations that are on the Butte County Web site, the North Valley Community Foundation,

the Schools Fire Relief Fund, the United Way of Northern California Camp Fire Fund.

But, of course, Judy, what's really needed now is shelter for these folks. And before

the wildfires, there was a less than 2 percent vacancy rate in Butte County. So where all

of these folks will be headed in the days and weeks ahead, that's very much up in the

air at this point.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, we can certainly hope at the very least, when people hear of these

organizations, they will -- some or many will reach out and make a contribution.

Cat Wise, reporting for us from Chico, California, near where those terrible fires were,

thank you, Cat.

CAT WISE: Thank you.

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