Here are the morning’s top stories on Wednesday, September 11, 2024…
- The Bridge Fire burning in the Angeles National Forest outside of L.A. has exploded in size growing to more than 47,000 acres with no containment. Evacuation orders are in place for small mountain communities and flames have consumed homes in Wrightwood and swept through the Mountain High Ski resort.
- The Airport Fire continues to burn across dry chaparral covered hills in Orange County. The wind-driven blaze had charred more than 22,000 acres, and jumped into Riverside County on Tuesday.
- The Line Fire has burned more than 34,000 acres in and around the San Bernardino National Forest. Smoke from the blaze– and others around the state— is making air quality unhealthy for more than 10 million people in Southern California, especially in inland areas. Some people are getting creative to protect themselves.
- California’s unhoused population has grown by 8% to 186,000 people. That’s according to a new analysis of state homelessness data from our California Newsroom partner, CalMatters.
- With the presidential race entering its final weeks, a new survey finds that economic issues are top of mind for California’s 9 million Latino voters.
Bridge Fire Explodes In Size, Impacts Mountain Communities
The Bridge Fire, which ignited on Sunday afternoon in the Angeles National Forest, exploded in size Tuesday from about 3,000 acres to more than 47,000 acres by Wednesday morning. The fire is burning through chaparral desiccated by months of extreme heat.
Those dry conditions, paired with a red flag warning, are expected to continue through Wednesday afternoon.
Evacuations, initially ordered for Camp Williams Resort and River Community, have now expanded to include Wrightwood, as the fire has been charging up steep inclines to the east. Scenes from the mountain town showed authorities working Tuesday to get people out as flames blew through the area.
Airport Fire Grows To 22,000 Acres
The Airport Fire continues to burn across dry chaparral covered hills in Orange County. The wind-driven blaze had charred more than 22,000 acres, and jumped into Riverside County on Tuesday.