From the BBC:
“California fires: Governor
asks Australia for help”
California is struggling to
contain huge wildfires burning forests and homes, warned Governor Gavin Newsom
on Friday as more than 12,000 fire-fighters battled blazes that have killed six
people. Help was on its way from several US states as Gov Newsom put in a plea
for assistance from Australia and Canada. "These fires are stretching our
resources, our personnel," he said. Among the 560 fires are some of the
largest the state has seen. More than 12,000 dry lightning strikes started the
blazes during a historic heat wave in which thermometers in Death Valley
National Park reached what could be the highest ever temperature reliably
recorded. By Friday, emergency officials said some of the fires had doubled in
size in a day, forcing 175,000 residents to flee. Two fires are now the 7th and
10th largest in the state's history, Gov Newsom said as he urged President
Donald Trump to sign a major disaster declaration. The worst are in the
mountains to the south and east of San Francisco. At least 43 people including
firefighters have been injured, and hundreds of buildings have burned down and
thousands more are threatened. Many blazes are burning on steep,
difficult-to-access terrain and have been fuelled by strong winds. The fires
are also threatening larger towns including Santa Cruz where flames reached
within a mile of the University of California Santa Cruz campus, reports
Reuters news agency. More fire=fighters, engines and surveillance planes are
racing in from other states including Oregon, New Mexico and Texas to help.
Assistance from what Gov Newsom called "the world's best
wildfire-fighters" in Australia has been requested. "We simply
haven't seen anything like this in many, many years," he said, adding that
an area the size of the US state of Rhode Island had already burned within California.
With more than 650,000 coronavirus cases, California also has the highest
number of infections in the US, and some evacuees have said they are afraid to
go to emergency shelters. One woman told CNN she had been forced to flee to a
community centre in Vacaville but was refusing to go inside for fear of
catching coronavirus. “Not only are we dealing with Covid, but with also the
heat and now the fires," said Cheryl Jarvis, who said she was currently
sleeping in her Toyota Prius. US agencies have updated disaster preparedness
and evacuation guidance in light of Covid-19. People who may be required to
flee have been to told to carry at least two face masks per person, as well as
hand sanitiser, soap and disinfectant wipes.
Here are some key guidelines
for protecting yourself against Covid-19 if you must evacuate to a shelter:
Wash your hands often
Keep six feet of distance from
anyone not among your household
Wear a face covering when
possible, and if possible, wash it regularly
Avoid sharing food and drinks
Frequently disinfect your area in
the shelter (including toys and electronics)
Emergency shelters are enforcing
social distancing rules and mask wearing, and have even given individual tents
to families to self-isolate. Some counties are seeking to set up separate
shelters for sick evacuees or anyone who is found to have a high temperature. Officials
say people should consider sheltering with family and friends. In another
pandemic twist, officials also advise that people remain indoors due to the
poor air quality outside. California is also facing an electricity strain,
which has caused a rolling blackout for thousands of customers. Officials have
appealed for residents to use less power or risk further cuts. In total, more
than 1,205 square miles (3,121 sq km) have burned across the state.
Satellite images show smoke
blanketing nearly all of California, as well most of Nevada and southern Idaho.
Big Basin Redwoods State Park, California's oldest state park and home to
redwood trees that are 2,000 years old, sustained extensive damage to historic
buildings. Firefighting teams are stretched thin across the state and have been
forced to work longer shifts than usual. A volunteer firefighting corps made up
of state prisoners, which has helped the state battle blazes since World War
Two, has been diminished this year due to the pandemic. President Trump blamed
California for the fires, and threatened to withhold federal funding as he
repeated a suggestion that was met with bemusement when he first raised it in
2018. Speaking to supporters in Pennsylvania on Thursday, he said he had told
state officials: "You gotta clean your floors, you gotta clean your
forests — there are many, many years of leaves and broken trees and they're like,
like, so flammable, you touch them and it goes up." "I've been
telling them this now for three years, but they don't want to listen," he
said. "'The environment, the environment,' but they have massive fires
again."
^ This has been in the news all
month now. I’m curious to see if any outside help (from Australia, Canada,
etc.) will come for California because of Covid-19 fears. ^
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