Here are the morning’s top stories on Tuesday, September 10, 2024…
- In the San Bernardino mountains, the Line Fire has burned more than 26,000 acres. The fire is only 5% contained and is expected to get bigger in the next few days. More than 65,000 homes and other structures are threatened.
- In Orange County, a fire that broke out on Monday and rapidly grew has burned about 9,000 acres as of Tuesday morning. The Airport Fire broke out between rugged scrublands and suburban neighborhoods in the county’s Trabuco Canyon area.
- Authorities continue to assess damage to the city of Clearlake from a wildfire that ignited Sunday in Lake County. The Boyles Fire burned at least 30 homes and as many as 60 cars.
- A new report that assessed K-12 schools nationwide gives California a “D” on school data transparency.
Hope For Crews Battling Line Fire
Several days of extreme temperatures have stoked a wildfire in Southern California that burned so hot it created its own thunderstorm-like weather systems, but firefighters hope to gain the upper hand as cooler weather is expected to move in after Tuesday.
The Line Fire has forced at least 6,000 people to evacuate and threatened thousands of homes and commercial structures as it burns along the edge of the San Bernardino National Forest, about 65 miles (105 kilometers) east of Los Angeles.
“We’re dealing with triple-digit temperatures and hard-to-reach steep areas where there has not been fire in decades, or in recorded history, so all that vegetation has led to significant fuel loads,” Cal Fire spokesperson Rick Carhart said.
Sparked By Public Works Equipment, Airport Fire Forces Evacuations In Orange County
A fast-burning fire in Trabuco Canyon in Orange County quickly forced mandatory evacuations of nearby homes. With a massive plume of smoke, the Airport Fire was visible over a wide area into the Monday evening commute. By early Tuesday, the fire had grown to approximately 9,000 acres, even as firefighters worked through the night.