What to Know About the Dixie Fire

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California Today

Tuesday: Although it rained connected Monday, occurrence play is good underway. And the state’s biggest blaze is burning adjacent areas scarred from the Camp Fire.

Jill Cowan

July 27, 2021, 8:29 a.m. ET

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Two firefighters, Sergio Zavala and Jesse Ackley, examined a h2o  pump successful  mentation  for the Dixie Fire’s attack  successful  Plumas County.
Credit...Noah Berger/Associated Press

Good morning.

There whitethorn person been rare July showers successful parts of California connected Monday. But marque nary mistake: The drought is inactive a threat. And occurrence play is underway.

The Dixie Fire, California’s largest wildfire this year, continued to pain done thousands of acres of unsmooth terrain, prompting evacuation orders and threatening communities successful a portion scarred by the representation of the 2018 Camp Fire, the deadliest successful the state’s history.

More than 5,400 firefighters were battling the Dixie Fire, which merged implicit the play with different adjacent blaze, the Fly Fire, and had burned done astir 200,000 acres, according to Cal Fire, the state’s occurrence agency.

That’s an country a small larger than New York City, and astir fractional of the acreage burned by the Bootleg Fire successful confederate Oregon, the nation’s largest this year. But the Bootleg Fire is burning successful a much distant area; 300 radical unrecorded wrong 5 miles of that blaze, according to The New York Times’s wildfire tracker, compared with 4,900 wrong 5 miles of the Dixie Fire.

The Dixie Fire started much than a week ago, conscionable a mates of miles from the spot wherever the Camp Fire ignited, said Rick Carhart, a spokesperson for Cal Fire successful Butte County. That occurrence killed much than 80 radical and each but leveled the distant municipality of Paradise.

“There truly is truthful overmuch — there’s nary different connection for it — PTSD,” Mr. Carhart said. “There’s truthful overmuch anxiety.”

A watercourse of firefighting helicopters taking disconnected from a adjacent airdrome successful caller days has flown implicit Magalia, a assemblage that was besides devastated by the Camp Fire. Residents determination are retired of the way of this year’s flames, Mr. Carhart said — but are inactive afraid.

“They spot a chopper with a bucket attached,” helium said. “And it’s, ‘Oh my God, present we spell again.’”

The 2 blazes besides carnivore different chilling similarity: Pacific Gas & Electric, the state’s largest utility, said past week that blown fuses connected 1 of its inferior poles whitethorn person sparked the Dixie Fire. PG&E pleaded guilty past twelvemonth to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter for its relation successful starting the Camp Fire.

So far, that level of demolition has been avoided this year.

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Credit...David Swanson/Reuters

Mr. Carhart said that crews person been making advancement successful controlling the Dixie Fire, and the upwind has been much cooperative successful caller days than occurrence officials had predicted. Nevertheless, the size and timing of the blaze — which helium said is already the 15th-largest successful California’s recorded past — constituent to a aboriginal successful which fires won’t beryllium constricted to a azygous season.

“One of the astir concerning things astir it is however aboriginal successful the twelvemonth it is,” Mr. Carhart.

Last year’s record-breaking wildfire season, during which millions of acres burned crossed California and the West, really had a below-average start, helium said, until wide lightning strikes ignited tinder-dry vegetation successful galore distant areas.

Right now, Mr. Carhart said, the thousands of firefighters who are cutting occurrence lines, dousing blistery spots oregon doing immoderate of the different time-consuming, physically demanding enactment required of them, are looking astatine months earlier there’s apt to beryllium rain, which heralds an extremity to the astir aggravated occurrence activity.

In the past, helium said, helium mightiness person expected a blaze similar the Dixie Fire sometime successful September — not July.

“We’re each benignant of learning that occurrence play isn’t a three-month oregon six-month happening anymore,” helium said.

For more:


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Credit...Damian Dovarganes/Associated Press

Compiled by Mariel Wamsley

  • California volition necessitate each authorities employees and on-site nationalist and backstage wellness attraction workers to beryllium vaccinated oregon look astatine slightest play testing, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced connected Monday. The caller request volition use to astir 246,000 authorities employees and galore much wellness attraction workers.

  • The SF Bar Owners Alliance, which represents astir 300 bars successful the Bay Area, officially recommended that bars cheque for impervious of vaccination earlier letting patrons inside. According to Eater, those sitting indoors whitethorn beryllium asked to stock their vaccination presumption oregon amusement impervious of a antagonistic Covid trial starting July 29; unvaccinated guests tin inactive beryllium seated outdoors.

  • A caller canvass from Emerson College/Nexstar Media recovered that 43 percent of California voters are successful favour of recalling Mr. Newsom successful the Sept. 14 peculiar election, up importantly from polls conducted earlier this year. Meanwhile, the vigor big Larry Elder seems to beryllium gaining momentum among voters arsenic a imaginable replacement, The Mercury News reports.

  • Five radical were changeable and killed connected Sunday successful a domestic unit incidental successful Wasco, Calif., according to The Bakersfield Californian. Among them were Sheriff’s Deputy Phillip Campas, who responded to the scene, arsenic good arsenic the suspect, the suspect’s 2 sons and their mother.

  • Barbara Boxer, the erstwhile U.S. legislator from California, was robbed and assaulted successful Oakland, she said connected her Twitter account. She said she was not earnestly hurt.

  • A tempest strategy brought rainfall — and with it, the chance of thunderstorms and flash flooding — to Southern California connected Monday, according to The Los Angeles Times. Experts said the wide rainfall was unusual, but it wouldn’t bash overmuch to mitigate the existent drought successful the state.

  • Using alteration of code information from the United States Postal Service, The San Francisco Chronicle shared its investigation of migration successful and retired of San Francisco since the commencement of the pandemic. Data suggests that net migration retired of the metropolis has fallen to prepandemic levels.

  • An sentiment portion successful The San Francisco Chronicle makes the lawsuit for new, affordable lodging successful Palo Alto. Though the city’s enactment unit has been expanding with the tech industry, lodging has lagged behind; betwixt 2010 and 2018, the jobs-to-housing ratio was 16:1.

  • A period aft Britney Spears publically spoke retired against her conservatorship, calling it abusive, her caller lawyer filed to person her begetter removed from the ineligible arrangement. The petition to oust James P. Spears was filed successful Los Angeles probate tribunal connected Monday.

  • At Teeth, a barroom successful San Francisco, customers tin browse the paper and wage for their bid without touching a insubstantial paper oregon interacting with a server. It’s made imaginable by scanning a QR code, a exertion that businesses are utilizing crossed the state — but its ability to way purchases has privateness experts concerned.


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Credit...Grace Loh Prasad

Art that responds to calamity has a agelong history, the Bay Area writer Grace Loh Prasad observes in this story. But, arsenic she and her preteen lad learned arsenic they took connected a pandemic task together, you don’t person to beryllium “an creator with a superior ‘A’ to marque creation successful times of upheaval.”

She and her son, Devin Loh Prasad, marked the transition of clip by folding origami cranes. The result, 400 cranes, is different reminder of the pandemic’s toll, but besides a testament to resilience.


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Jill Cowan grew up successful Orange County, graduated from U.C. Berkeley and has reported each implicit the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she ever wants to spot more. Follow on present oregon connected Twitter.

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