
A massive wildfire is burning in the Angeles National Forest threatening the
communities of La Canada, La Crescenta, Sunland, Tujunga, Acton and Agua
Dulce. Firefighters have been active with structure protection and
evacuations while fighting the fast moving blaze. Southern California Fire
Journal has received information that two firefighter perished while
combating the intense flames today near Los Angeles County Fire Camp 16.
Two Los Angeles County firefighters were killed Sunday when their vehicle
rolled down a mountain side amid the intense flames of a wildfire that
threatened 12,000 homes. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger urged those in the
fire's path to get out as the blazes rained ash on cars as far away as
downtown Los Angeles, spreading in all directions in dry conditions.
Firefighters fixed their attention on the blaze's fast-moving eastern side
where flames lapped at the foot of a vital communications and astronomy
center of Mount Wilson, and on the northwestern front, where the two
firefighters were killed on Mount Gleason near the city of Acton.
"We ask for your understanding, for your patience as we move through this
difficult time, and please, prayers for the families of our two brothers
that we lost," county Deputy Fire Chief Mike Bryant said through tears at a
Sunday night press conference.

Fire Capt. Tedmund Hall, 47, of San Bernardino County, and firefighter
Specialist Arnaldo "Arnie" Quinones, 35, of Palmdale were killed in the
crash, said Los Angeles County Fire Capt. Mike Savage. Authorities did not
give a cause for the crash, and officials at the press conference would take
no questions on the deaths.
Television helicopter video on Sunday night showed an upside-down vehicle on
the mountain side.
"Our hearts are heavy as we are tragically reminded of the sacrifices our
firefighters and their families make daily to keep us safe," Schwarzenegger
said in a statement.
The blaze was only about 5 percent contained and had scorched 71 square
miles in the Angeles National Forest. Mandatory evacuations were in effect
for neighborhoods in Glendale, Pasadena and other cities and towns north of
Los Angeles. Officials said air quality in parts of the foothills bordered
on hazardous.
The fire, which broke out Wednesday afternoon, was the largest of many
burning around California, including a new blaze in Placer County northeast
of Sacramento that destroyed 60 structures, many of them homes.
The Southern California fire was expected during the night Sunday to reach
the top of Mount Wilson, where 22 television stations, many radio stations
and cell phone providers have their transmitters, said U.S. Forest Service
Capt. Mike Dietrich.
Firefighters were pulled from the top of the mountain after clearing brush
and spraying retardant on antennas because it was too dangerous for them to
remain.
"We've done all the preparation we can," county fire spokesman Mark Savage
said.
Television stations said if the antennas burn broadcast signals will be
affected but satellite and cable transmissions will not be.
Two giant telescopes and several multimillion-dollar university programs are
housed in the century-old Mount Wilson Observatory. The complex of buildings
is both a historic landmark and a thriving modern center for astronomy.
At least 18 homes were destroyed in the fire and firefighters expected to
find many more, authorities said.
While thousands have fled, two people who tried to ride out the firestorm in
a backyard hot tub were burned. The pair in Big Tujunga Canyon, on the
southwestern edge of the fire, "completely underestimated the fire" and the
hot tub provided "no protection whatsoever," Sheriff's spokesman Steve
Whitmore said Sunday.
The pair made their way to firefighters and were airlifted out by a
sheriff's rescue helicopter. They received adequate notification to evacuate
from deputies but decided to stay, Whitmore said.
Whitmore described their condition as "critical" but fire officials said one
of the two was treated and released and the other remained hospitalized in
stable condition. A third person was burned Saturday in an evacuation area
along Highway 2 near Mount Wilson, officials said. Details of that injury
were not immediately known.
"There were people that did not listen, and there were three people that got
burned and got critically injured because they did not listen,"
Schwarzenegger said at a news conference at the fire command post.
For the third straight day, humidity was very low and temperatures were
expected in the high 90s. Nearly 3,000 firefighters were battling the blaze.
Mandatory evacuations were also in effect for neighborhoods in Altadena and
for the communities of Acton, La Canada Flintridge, La Crescenta and Big
Tujunga Canyon.
There was some progress Sunday, as a small number of La Canada Flintridge
residents living west of the Arroyo Seco were told they could go back to
their homes.
But more evacuations were ordered in Acton in the Antelope Valley, and
school districts in La Canada Flintridge and Glendale announced that classes
were canceled Monday because of the fire.
Fixed-wing aircraft and a DC-10 jumbo jet were dropping water and flame
retardant on the fire.
At the fire command post, Schwarzenegger praised firefighters for
successfully protecting subdivisions in the foothills.
Rob Driscoll and his wife, Beth Halaas, said they lost their house in Big
Tujunga Canyon. By Sunday they were desperate for more information and came
to the command post to get answers.
"Our neighbors sent us photos of all the other houses that are lost," Halaas
said, her voice breaking as her young son nestled his sunburned face in her
arms. "We've heard as many as 30 houses burned."
At least 12 evacuation centers were set up at schools and community centers
in the area.
The center at Crescenta Valley High School filled up, but by Sunday
afternoon fewer than two dozen people remained. Residents trickled in to get
information and snacks.
Debbie and Mercer Barrows said their house was saved but they lost their
scenic view of a hillside to the flames.
"That'll grow back," said Mercer Barrows, a TV producer.
To the north, at least 60 structures - many of them homes - were destroyed
in a fast-moving fire that broke out Sunday afternoon in the Sierra
foothills town of Auburn northeast of Sacramento and the governor declared a
state of emergency in the area.
The fire had consumed 275 acres amid high winds and was 50 percent contained
Sunday night, CalFire spokesman Daniel Berlant.
Berlant said it was not clear how many of the burned structures were homes
and it was likely to remain uncertain until daylight.
About 30 people waited anxiously for news at an evacuation center in the
Rock Creek Elementary School.
Pam and Stephen Incerty did not know the fate of their home on a beautiful
5-acre parcel in the rolling hills covered with trees.
Stephen Incerty wondered what the land looks like now after fire has ripped
through it.
"If there's nothing there when we get back, we won't rebuild," he said.
"There'd be no trees, just dirt."
In the state's coastal midsection, all evacuation orders were lifted Sunday
after a 10-square-mile fire burned near the Monterey County town of Soledad.
The blaze, 80 percent contained, was started by agricultural fireworks used
to scare animals away from crops. The fire destroyed one home.
In Mariposa County, a nearly 7-square-mile fire burned in Yosemite National
Park. The blaze was 50 percent contained Sunday, said park spokeswoman
Vickie Mates. Two people sustained minor injuries, she said.
Park officials closed a campground and a portion of Highway 120,
anticipating that the fire would spread north toward Tioga Road, the highest
elevation route through the Sierra.
About 50 homes in the towns of El Portal and Foresta were under evacuation
orders and roads in the area will remain closed through Monday, Mates said.