Thứ Sáu, 6 tháng 7, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Jul 6 2018

BREAKING!!!

CALIFORNIA Gov To Be PROSECUTED!

California Governor Jerry Brown thought he was above the law when he defied President

Donald Trump to declare his state to be a sanctuary state.

Unfortunately for Brown, however, he just learned he was dead wrong.

Trump dropped the hammer on the "sanctuary state" of California this week when Attorney

General Jeff Sessions filed a lawsuit against the state's immigration policies.

Brown responded by having a pathetic meltdown at a press conference in which he accused

Sessions of catering to Trump and to his conservative base.

"This is really unprecedented for the chief law enforcement officer of the United States

to come out to California and act more like Fox News than a law enforcement officer.

This is a political stunt," Brown said, according to The Hill.

"We know the Trump administration is full of liars.

They've pled guilty already to the special counsel.

This is basically going to war against the state of California, the engine of the American

economy.

It's not wise, it's not right, and it will not stand."

The lawsuit filed by Sessions on Tuesday targets three California laws aimed at protecting

undocumented immigrants.

The first law requires employers to notify employees if immigration authorities are going

to conduct enforcement operations on the job site, while the second law allows California's

Department of Justice to inspect federal detention facilities where undocumented immigrants are

held.

The third law stops state and local law enforcement officers from cooperating with federal immigration

authorities to transfer or facilitate detentions of undocumented immigrants in state custody.

This specific law is what Trump's supporters have said makes California a sanctuary jurisdiction

for undocumented immigrants.

Trump's Department of Justice said in court documents that these three laws "have the

purpose and effect of making it more difficult for federal immigration officers to carry

out their responsibilities in California."

"California is using every power it has, and some it doesn't, to frustrate federal

law enforcement," Sessions told a gathering of officers in Sacramento.

"So you can be sure I'm going to use every power I have to stop them."

He went on to say that California was trying to nullify the law.

"There is no nullification.

There is no secession.

Federal law is the supreme law of the land.

I would invite any doubters to go to Gettysburg, to the tombstones of John C. Calhoun and Abraham

Lincoln.

This matter has been settled," Sessions said.

Brown lost his mind at this, saying that Sessions' speech was "unbecoming" of the nation's

chief law enforcement officer.

The governor then suggested that Sessions is trying to return to Trump's good graces

after a rocky first year in which Trump and Sessions developed a serious rift in their

once-close relationship.

"I assume, and this is pure speculation, that Jeff thinks that Donald will be happy

with him," Brown said.

"Let's face it, the Trump White House is under siege.

[Special counsel Robert] Mueller is closing in.

There are more indictments to come."

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra (D) pledged that his office will vigorously

defend the three laws.

"The lawsuit challenges some of our state laws, which are again fully constitutional

and provide for the safety and welfare of all of our people," Becerra said.

"The 10th Amendment provides California with the right to decline to participate in

civil immigration enforcement."

He went on to say that Trump's DOJ opened itself to the discovery process, which would

allow California lawyers to dig into the internal debate over the lawsuit, which could drag

on for years.

"This lawsuit is going to last a lot longer than the Trump administration," Brown ominously

concluded.

For more infomation >> BREAKING!!! CALIFORNIA Gov To Be PROSECUTED! - Duration: 14:08.

-------------------------------------------

A Budding Trade War Could Harm a Growing U.S and California Economy - Duration: 7:17.

A Budding Trade War Could Harm a Growing U.S.

and California Economy

Despite rumblings of a trade war, the U.S. economy is marching forward at a nice pace

as the U.S. unemployment rate hits a low not seen for almost 50 years.

Jobs are still being created every month with no end in sight.

Even with inflation heating up to 2.4 percent during the first five months of this year,

everything seems to be under control.

In May, the U.S. unemployment rate was at 3.8 percent and the California unemployment

rate stood at 4.2 percent.

"It is steady as she goes for the regional, state and U.S. economy," said Robert Kleinhenz,

an economist and executive director of research for Beacon Economics in Los Angeles.

"Here in California, it has been a good year, outpacing the U.S. in terms of job creation.

We have seen 1.8 percent to 2 percent growth in jobs over last year compared to 1.6 percent

for the nation as a whole," he said.

In California, industries that have been expanding the most rapidly include healthcare, leisure

and hospitality (mostly restaurants), and the construction industry, Kleinhenz said.

One cloud on the horizon is a possible trade war, which could have a ripple effect on the

Los Angeles/Long Beach port complex, the largest in the United States.

Nearly 40 percent of all cargo containers that come into the United States are processed

by these two ports.

Recently, the Port of Los Angeles calculated that U.S. tariffs on items including aluminum,

steel, washing machines, solar panels and possibly cars would have a big effect on its

business.

Gene Seroka, the port's executive director, recently calculated that U.S. tariffs on Chinese

goods and retaliatory Chinese tariffs could affect 15 percent of shipments passing through

the watery gateway.

A 25 percent tariff on $34 billion in Chinese goods is scheduled to begin July 6, along

with Chinese retaliatory measures of the same value on U.S. goods.

There are also plans for the U.S. to impose 25 percent tariffs on an additional $16 billion

worth of Chinese goods, and 10 percent tariffs on $200 billion more, but the timing of those

tariffs is still up in the air.

This comes at a time when the local ports are showing healthy cargo-container volumes.

Last year was a record-breaking year for both the Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long

Beach.

Together, both ports handled 16.8 million 20-foot cargo containers compared to 15.57

million containers in 2016.

But container traffic at the Port of Los Angeles is down 4.4 percent this year while volume

is up 16.2 percent at the Port of Long Beach.

Paul Bingham, an economic consultant who specializes in trade and transportation at the Economic

Research Development Group in Boston, said there is no doubt that trade wars damage economies.

"When you have imposed tariffs and barriers to trade, just the uncertainty to transactions

around trade raises business risks, which has costs," he said.

"It leads to hesitation and exploration of trading alternatives.

And for an important gateway like we have in Southern California, it means that there

will be less business, less hours for longshore workers and less employment for companies

that handle products."

Foreign businesses thinking of setting up a factory or office in the U.S. might shift

their plans, feeling their investment might be in jeopardy if they plan to sell their

goods around the world.

Bingham estimates that a trade war could reduce the nation's gross domestic product by one-tenth

of a percent to one-half of a percent this year.

Currently, the nation's GDP is expected to grow by about 2.9 percent in 2018.

"This could shake businesses, consumer confidence and tip us into a recession," the economist

said.

Shop till you drop

With more money in their pockets, consumers have been on a major shopping spree recently.

In May, consumer spending at retail stores was up 5.6 percent over last year while clothing

and clothing accessories stores did better with an 8.2 percent jump from one year ago,

according to the National Retail Federation.

"I haven't seen this much economic confidence since Ronald Reagan was president [in the

1980s]," said Britt Beemer, a retail analyst and founder of America's Research Group,

which polls 1,200 consumers a week to take the pulse of their retail-spending attitude.

But he said any retailer who wants to survive needs to get out of a shopping mall.

"Mall traffic is dropping like a rock.

The anchors are pulling the malls down," he said.

"It's an economic mess."

In a recent survey, he said that 56 percent to 58 percent of consumers said they don't

want to shop in a mall because it was so inefficient.

"You have to park, walk through the parking lot, walk through the mall to get to the stores

and walk back through the mall to get to the parking lot," he explained.

"And the under-35-year-old crowd is incredibly impatient.

If you waste 15 minutes of their time, they get angry."

For more infomation >> A Budding Trade War Could Harm a Growing U.S and California Economy - Duration: 7:17.

-------------------------------------------

California Lottery News: Ep. 48 – July - Duration: 1:26.

Hey, I'm Russ Lopez.

And I'm Donna Cordova, with a 90 second California Lottery News update.

Here's something a lot of you have been asking for.

Now you can use your cell phone to Check-A-Ticket!

It's a new feature on the California Lottery mobile app.

Just hover the camera over the "squiggly" looking barcode you see on our newer tickets.

It'll not only tell if you win, but how much!

Not bad.

This works on Scratchers® and all of our draw games.

Learn more at www.calottery.com/mobileapp.

Perhaps try it on these new Scratchers®!

Lottery funding helps support California public schools.

This funding is unique because it's largely flexible.

So, schools can use it on specific things they they need other schools don't.

For example: Sacramento City College teaches dental hygienists.

So, it uses Lottery funding on bibs, gloves students use when they train on actual patients.

It was nice to have to critically think using with what we've learned in the classroom and

applying it to the clinic setting.

See other ways schools use Lottery funding at www.calottery.com/edvideos.

And, stay connected with us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Instagram.

Till next time!

For more infomation >> California Lottery News: Ep. 48 – July - Duration: 1:26.

-------------------------------------------

American Cancer Society's California Spirit Gala - Duration: 3:45.

For more infomation >> American Cancer Society's California Spirit Gala - Duration: 3:45.

-------------------------------------------

США. КАЛИФОРНИЯ. САН-ФРАНЦИСКО.ЧАСТЬ 1/USA VACATION. CALIFORNIA. SAN-FRANCISCO.PART1.#16 - Duration: 7:05.

For more infomation >> США. КАЛИФОРНИЯ. САН-ФРАНЦИСКО.ЧАСТЬ 1/USA VACATION. CALIFORNIA. SAN-FRANCISCO.PART1.#16 - Duration: 7:05.

-------------------------------------------

High Surf Warnings In Effect At Southern California Beaches - Duration: 1:34.

For more infomation >> High Surf Warnings In Effect At Southern California Beaches - Duration: 1:34.

-------------------------------------------

California Senators Reach Agreement on Net Neutrality Bill - Duration: 2:58.

For more infomation >> California Senators Reach Agreement on Net Neutrality Bill - Duration: 2:58.

-------------------------------------------

Record-Breaking Temps Forecast To Roast Southern California - Duration: 2:40.

For more infomation >> Record-Breaking Temps Forecast To Roast Southern California - Duration: 2:40.

-------------------------------------------

California bill jeopardizing criminal justice reform - Duration: 2:43.

For more infomation >> California bill jeopardizing criminal justice reform - Duration: 2:43.

-------------------------------------------

Southern California hit by record-breaking heat wave - 247 news - Duration: 4:48.

Southern California has been hit by a record-breaking heat wave this Friday reaching triple-digit temperatures in some parts of the state

 Los Angeles baked under 108-degree heat Friday afternoon that's expected to continue into Saturday before dipping into the high 90s on Sunday

 San Diego County recorded a scorching 112 degrees Fahrenheit at 11am, according to the National Weather Service

In Woodland Hills the heat reached 115 degrees and is expected to reach 117.The heat led to three brush fires as well

One blazed along 100 acres north of San Bernardino in the 110 degree heat. The second burned in the Angeles National Forest in the San Gabriel and Sierra Pelona Mountains

And a third raged in Alpine, California.  more videos 1 2 3 Watch video High on Life announces tragic death of channel creators Watch video White man calls 911 on black woman for using neighborhood pool Watch video Serena Williams tends to daughter before going to win at Wimbledon Watch video Rescue mission: new footage surfaces from depths of flooded Thai cave Watch video 16-year-old MAGA hat wearing kid is assaulted in a Whataburger Watch video Thai diver who died shares video before travelling to cave Watch video Kennedy family parties in Hyannis Port ahead of the wedding Watch video Trump insists his Supreme Court pick will 'hit a home run' Watch video Rescue mission: Footage emerges from depths of flooded Thai cave Watch video Two brothers 'raped and murdered 16-year-old on camping trip' Watch video Thai rescue teams search for secret passage out of flooded cave Watch video Musician Elvis Costello plays Global Citizen Festival in 2013 Locals took to social media to post a fire that burst in Alpine, California

Officials are urging residents to take shelter and stay indoors given the blazing triple-digit heat

 The heat not only poses a threat to people but also to the environment leading to increased fire danger

 Minor heat-related illnesses, officials warn, can also worsen quickly and turn fatal in the heat blast

   'Extreme heat can be dangerous - especially for young people and seniors,' Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said in a statement

The heat is caused by a 'humongous' dome of high pressure located throughout Arizona, Nevada and Utah

   'Today will be one for the record books. Almost all if not all of the daily records will fall today

It is likely that several monthly records will fall and it's possible that one or two all-time records will be made today,' the Los Angeles region weather office said

Share this article Share The heat hit the state early in the morning starting in South California with 80 degree temperatures recorded before dawn

 By 3am it was already 98 degrees in Gaviota near Santa Barbara. In the Woodland Hills area temperatures reached 115 degrees

   The temperatures in valley around Los Angeles led to the possibility of unhealthy air quality

Air pollution regulators said the conditions were likely to produce an atmospheric inversion that would increase ground-level ozone, which is linked to a host of respiratory troubles ranging from trouble breathing to asthma attacks

Officials say Sunday could lead to thunderstorms with the arrival of seasonal monsoonal moisture in the air

  

For more infomation >> Southern California hit by record-breaking heat wave - 247 news - Duration: 4:48.

-------------------------------------------

Judge Blocks 1 California Sanctuary Law, Allows 2 Others - Duration: 4:15.

For more infomation >> Judge Blocks 1 California Sanctuary Law, Allows 2 Others - Duration: 4:15.

-------------------------------------------

Horror en California: niño fue torturado hasta la muerte por su familia - Duration: 3:30.

Impotencia e indignación ha desatado el caso de Anthony Avalos, en California (EE

UU). El menor, de solo 10 años, fue torturado durante días por su propia familia antes de finalmente fallecer, el 21 de junio

El historial de abusos es una exhibición de insana crueldad. Según indicaron los documentos judiciales del caso en el canal KNBC-TV, el pequeño era dejado sin comer, recibía azotes contra el piso, brutales golpizas y humillaciones, tales como beber salsa caliente y prohibición de usar el baño, Anthony vivía con su madre Heather Maxine Barron, de 28 años, y el novio de esta, Kareem Ernesto Leiva, de 32

Ambos serán procesados por tortura y asesinato, con riesgo de recibir la cadena perpetua

Hermanos eran forzados a participar   Algunas veces eran sus propios hermanos y hermanas quienes lo maltrataban, según los documentos

Los ocho hermanos afirmaron ante las autoridades que eran obligados por la macabra pareja a formar parte del abuso

"En un momento, Anthony no podía caminar, permaneció inconsciente tirado en el piso de su habitación durante horas, no se le dio atención médica y tampoco podía comer por sí solo", escribió el vicefiscal de distrito en Los Ángeles, Jonathan Hatami, en una moción presentada ante una corte

Los policías acudieron a la casa del niño un día antes de que falleciera en un hospital

Su madre dijo que el menor se había caído de las escaleras. Había denuncias La madre del niño y su pareja arriesgan cadena perpetua Las autoridades de bienestar infantil del condado recibieron una decena de reportes de sospechas de abuso sobre el niño de 2013 a 2016

Anthony fue retirado de su casa durante varios meses cuando se comprobaron los reportes de abuso

Pero regresó a su hogar después de que sus familiares recibieron asesoría, dijeron autoridades

Tras el deceso de Anthony, las autoridades enviaron con trabajadores sociales a los otros ocho hermanos, que tienen entre 11 meses y 12 años de edad, para ser trasladados a un hogar de menores

For more infomation >> Horror en California: niño fue torturado hasta la muerte por su familia - Duration: 3:30.

-------------------------------------------

At Home in Southern California - San Diego 7-8-18 - Duration: 28:32.

For more infomation >> At Home in Southern California - San Diego 7-8-18 - Duration: 28:32.

-------------------------------------------

Why California Will Save America From Donald Trump's 'Dog Whistle' Immigration Policies | Opinion - Duration: 11:49.

The images of screaming children were searing, the cries unforgettable. In June, as the public reeled from around-the-clock coverage of the Trump administration's systemic separation of immigrant families, the president dug in

"They could be murderers and thieves and so much else," Trump said of those crossing the border

"We want a safe country, and it starts with the borders, and that's the way it is

" As the criticism mounted, he accused Democrats of wanting migrants to "infest our Country

" And even after signing an executive order to end the controversial separations, he remained defiant

At a White House press conference, the president stood with family members of people killed by undocumented immigrants—or, as Trump called them, "the American citizens permanently separated from their loved ones

" Amid the uproar, according to The New York Times, Trump sought to reassure his advisers; while two-thirds of the American public disapproved of separating families at the border, most Republicans backed the practice as a deterrent

"My people love it," he told them. Is this smart politics? Should the Republican Party follow a polarizing figure willing to criminalize immigrants and asylum seekers to shore up his own popularity? Or is this a recipe for political extinction? In making a choice, GOP leaders may want to remember that we've seen this movie before—actually a grainy television advertisement in which former Republican Governor Pete Wilson of California resuscitated a lagging 1994 re-election campaign by depicting immigrants dashing across the U

S.-Mexico border: "They keep coming," intoned a deep and foreboding background voice

California voters responded by re-upping with Wilson and passing Proposition 187, a ballot measure aimed at denying nearly all public services, including access to education, to undocumented residents

Keep up with this story and more by subscribing now For Republicans, the victory was fleeting

Nearly all of Proposition 187 was soon ruled unconstitutional, forcing the state to take a more rational approach to managing the integration of immigrants into civic and economic life

And the long-term political consequences were devastating. In 1994, the GOP did indeed win five of the top seven statewide positions and control of the state Assembly

But today, not a single Republican holds statewide office, the Democrats run Sacramento, and the GOP is on track to effectively become a third party; just 26 percent of Californians identify as Republican, almost 20 points behind Democrats and nearly even with "no party preference

" So is California a warning signal or a one-off? After all, Trump won the presidency in 2016 on an anti-immigration platform

Meanwhile, the Golden State is home to Hollywood, high-tech and hybrids; surely, its political evolution is as unique as its free-spirited character

But while we Californians do like to proclaim our differences—and many in other states are happy when we do so—the parallels between California's yesterday and America's today are striking

For example, between 1980 and 2000, struggles over immigration, affirmative action and proper policing wracked the state as it experienced a rapid demographic shift from about two-thirds white to majority people of color

The entire country is now confronting this change, only in slower motion. And just as the state's politics were torn asunder in the early 1990s, so was its economy: Nearly half of the country's net job losses in that period were suffered in the Golden State

Standing in the wings to fan the flames of discontent was that era's early version of Fox News: Rush Limbaugh perfected his bombastic talk radio shtick in Sacramento in the late 1980s, and a slew of local right-wing hosts picked up the race-baiting mantle in the decade that followed

Divisive politics fueled by demographic anxiety, reinforced by economic uncertainty and stirred up by those who stood to profit from polarization

Sound familiar? Several factors turned things around and pushed the Republicans out of power

The first was demographic: The shock of change subsided, residents got more accustomed to the realities (and benefits) of diversity, and a growing electorate of color remembered exactly which party had painted them as bandits

A second was economic: The rise of the state's high-tech sector shifted the political leanings of business

Supporting an anti-immigrant politician to secure deregulation or a tax cut became less palatable to entrepreneurs wanting to tap into talent from all over the world

(Silicon Valley also realized that the state's nearly 3 million undocumented residents were a key part of the service economy propping up programmers too busy to tend their children, care for their elders and grow or even prepare their own food

) A final set of factors were political. On one hand, a series of rule changes weakened the political establishment

Citizen-driven redistricting took away the power of lawmakers to draw the boundaries of their own districts, making races more competitive

And term limits made it possible for leaders to leap from protest to politician: Former state Senate leader Kevin de León, the architect of the 2017 "sanctuary state" bill limiting police cooperation with federal immigration authorities (tellingly called the California Values Act), cut his political teeth as a young organizer battling Proposition 187

But it wasn't just new rules. Community organizers, frustrated by a series of ballot measures that followed 1994's immigrant-bashing with successful attacks on affirmative action (1996), bilingual education (1998) and juvenile offenders (2000), began to dig in to change the politics of the state

They realized their task was not to chase the electorate (in today's terms, that would mean pursuing the elusive Trump voter with promises to punish immigrants, just not as inhumanely) but to change the electorate

Activists targeted disenchanted and disengaged citizens who could provide a progressive difference in key swing races

These new and occasional voters lent crucial support for ballot measures that raised taxes on the rich and shrank the prison population

They also offered the sort of political cover that allowed Democratic officeholders to grant driver's licenses to undocumented residents and extend state-sponsored health care to undocumented children

It's a road map for the national resistance: lower racial anxiety, reach out to business, focus on the rules of engagement (for example, fighting voter ID laws) and build a grassroots base that can align with but also push the Democratic Party from below

And it's a warning to Republicans as well: Keep up the current anti-immigrant tilt and the tsunami that toppled a state party that once brought us Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and tax-cutting fever could eventually head your way

The blinking warning signs in California itself are clear. In 2016, Orange County, a bulwark for the Republican Party and a historic base for right-wing extremist groups like the John Birch Society, voted for the Democratic presidential candidate for the first time since the Great Depression

And Republicans will be battling to retain seven highly competitive House seats)—about a third of what is necessary to hand the lower chamber to Democrats—in districts that Hillary Clinton won

Now, Republicans find themselves chasing the electorate. Two at-risk Republican incumbents, Representatives Jeff Denham and David Valadao, both of the Latino-rich Central Valley, were early signers of a "discharge petition" in May seeking to force the House to vote on bipartisan immigration reform

Still, it's hard to escape the shadow of a state party that dug itself into a political hole a long time ago with its support of anti-immigrant legislation—or a president who launched his campaign by labeling Mexicans as "rapists

" When you've been playing dog-whistle racial politics, don't be surprised when someone with a fully racist bullhorn walks in to find a warmed-up audience

And don't be shocked when that act eventually wears thin on a changing America. Like California Republicans before them, the national party seems to be keeping its eye on the past rather than the prize

But we Californians know how this movie started and how it ends: with a rejection of the politics of division and an embrace of the future

Manuel Pastor is a professor of sociology at the University of Southern California and author of State of Resistance: What California's Dizzying Descent and Remarkable Resurgence Mean for America's Future

For more infomation >> Why California Will Save America From Donald Trump's 'Dog Whistle' Immigration Policies | Opinion - Duration: 11:49.

-------------------------------------------

Volkswagen Westfalia California Coach - Duration: 1:05.

For more infomation >> Volkswagen Westfalia California Coach - Duration: 1:05.

-------------------------------------------

California Fire Map: Fires Near Me Today [July 5] | Heavy.com - Duration: 14:26.

California Fire Map: Fires Near Me Today [July 5] | Heavy.com

During the hot summer months, fires are still a problem in California.

The biggest fire is still the County Fire in Yolo County, but there are others you will want to keep an eye on also. Here is a list, with maps, of the larger fires around the state, their current containment levels, and where they are located for July 5.

Read on for more details.

General Map of California Fires.

This map below is an interactive map of some of the bigger fires in California right now on July 5, provided by CAL FIRE and Google.

Fires in red are active and fires in black are contained.

The map above lists numerous active fires, which this article will describe in more detail in the next section. Here's another active fire map for comparison, but this one is not updated as frequently.

It was last updated on July 3 (although other sources are indicating July 5.

Use this as your secondary map.):.

And here is another detailed map of the fires, courtesy of GMAP4 and MappingSupport.com.

You can zoom in to see the areas of most interest to you or zoom out to see the whole state.

Note that due to new requirements by Google, the map will no longer be active on July 15.

Here is a map of the fires from the Bureau of Land Management from July 4:.

7/4 wildfire map of BLM-managed public lands.

Follow fire info @inciweb → https://t.co/IDvGqBylED & @CAL_FIRE → https://t.co/F2s9h9A5Ld #PawneeFire #CountyFire #PetersburgFire #FlatFire #LionsFire pic.twitter.com/vXVFKuMU8V — Bureau of Land Management California (@BLMca) July 4, 2018  .

List of Active Fires in California as of July 5.

Here are the active fires and updates about them, per CAL FIRE.

Benton Fire.

This is a newer addition to the map.

It's located off Benton Road and Crams Corner Drive in Anza in Riverside County.

The fire is 63 acres and 75 percent contained, and forward spread has topped.

Canyon Fire.

CAL FIRE has been assisting Los Padres National Forest with this fire, which is located north of Lake Piru in Los Angeles County, and is listed as active on CAL FIRE's map.

It's unclear what the current status for this fire is.

Cherry Fire.

CAL FIRE is assisting Klamath National Forest with this fire, which is located near Cherry Maple Road Klamath River, northwest of Yreka.

The fire is 63 acres and 90 percent contained.

The incident is no longer being updated as the fire is considered fully contained, although it's still listed on the map.

Creek Fire.

This south fire is down to 33 acres and 87 percent contained.

There's another fire farther north also called the Creek Fire on the CAL FIRE map, and that one is 1,678 acres and 98 percent contained.

Flat Fire.

This fire, near Redding Creek Rd.

southeast of Douglas City in Trinity County, is 300 acres and 90 percent contained.

Lions Fire.

This fire is located in the Sierra National Forest.

It is now 4,000 acres with 60 percent containment.This fire was caused by lightning.

According to InciWeb, crews are reinforcing and securing the fireline to hold the fire's current size.

Air quality in surrounding areas has been slightly affected.

The following trails have been temporarily closed: "Sierra National Forest Trails No.

26E01 (Mammoth Trail) to the Inyo NF Boundary, 26E14, 26E56, and 26E46 from the Inyo NF boundary.

Inyo NF trail closures include 26E01 from the Sierra NF to 2601 junction.

Trail closures will remain in place until fire management staff determines that it is safe to reopen the area.".

Pawnee Fire.

The Pawnee Fire is located off Pawnee Road and New Long Valley Road, northeast of Clearlake Oaks in Lake County.

It's 15,000 acres and 92 percent contained.

Twenty-two structures were destroyed in the fire.  For the latest evacuation updates, see the Lake Sheriff's website.  Due to current weather conditions, fire behavior has diminished, although a threat remains.

Petersburg Fire.

This fire is 215 acres and located three miles south of Petersburg station.

It started on July 1.

An evacuation order is in effect for Lakeview Ranch and Glacier View Ranch.

The evacuation order for Big Flat was downgraded to a warning.

The fire is 50 percent contained.

Upper Colony Fire.

This fire is located off Upper Colony Road, Smith Valley, East of Highway 395 in Nevada.

It's not a California fire, but close enough that CAL FIRE is listing it on its map.

However, recent reports indicate the fire is now fully contained.

County Fire in Yolo County.

A fire broke out in Yolo County on Saturday afternoon, Press Democrat reported.

It is in the rural community of Guinda in Yolo County.

This fire quickly grew to 1,000 acres in just a few hours, burning south of Guinda near County Road 63, about seven miles north of Cache Creek Casino, the Press Democrat has shared.

The fire was originally called the Guinda Fire and was later renamed the County Fire.

As of Monday morning, the fire had grown to 44,500 acres and was 3 percent contained.

On Tuesday it had grown to 70,000 acres and 5 percent contained.

As of Thursday, it is now 86,000 acres and 30 percent contained.

Mandatory evacuations were issued in the following areas, according to CAL FIRE:.

Residences served by Highway 128, between Monticello Dam and Pleasants Valley Road.

West of State Highway 16 to Berryessa Knoxville Road.

South of Old County Road 40.

North of County Road 53.

Evacuation Advisory:.

North of Quail Canyon Road.

South of Highway 128.

East of the Blue Ridge mountains.

West of Pleasants Valley Road.

East of Capell Valley Road.

North of State Highway 128 from Capell Valley Road, East to the Napa County line.

According to CAL FIRE, road closures have been noted in the following areas: "Northbound County Road 87 from Highway 128.

Berryessa Knoxville Road, from the Pope Creek Bridge to the Napa/Lake County line.

Pleasants Valley Road, South from Highway 128 remains open to serve traffic into Solano County.

Eastbound Highway 128 at Markley Resort.

Westbound Highway 128 at Pleasants Valley Road.".

If you have questions about current evacuations and advisories in Yolo County, call 211.

For questions regarding Napa County, text your ZIP code to 888777.

Additional Fires.

Fire in Irwindale near the Santa Fe Dam Recreation Area.

A few additional fires have cropped up, but they aren't listed on the CAL FIRE map yet.

One of these is an Irwindale Fire.

This is a multi-acre brush fire near the Santa Fe Dam Recreation Area in Irwindale that has just recently started.

It's now 15+ acres and is a second alarm fire as of early Thursday evening.

ABC 7 is reporting that no structures are currently threatened.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét