Northern California rain hampers life for wildfire survivors

Residents of communities charred by a Los Angeles-area fire stacked sandbags as they prepared for possible downpours that threaten to unleash runoff from hillsides left barren by flames.

A weather front bringing rain moves in behind Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill Wednesday, November 21, 2018, in San Francisco.
AP

A weather front bringing rain moves in behind Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill Wednesday, November 21, 2018, in San Francisco.

Amy Sheppard packs her belongings into a plastic garbage bag as rain drips around her, readying to move on from a field by a Walmart where thousands of evacuees had taken refuge from a deadly Northern California wildfire.

Sheppard, 38, her sister and niece, who is 1, are looking to move into a dry hotel after camping in the field for four days. They lost their home in Magalia and the jewelry-maker tears up as she thinks about what's next.

"This rain is making it so hard," she said.

Heavier rain is expected later in the day in the Paradise burn area, which is about 225 kilometers (140 miles) north of San Francisco, where the Camp Fire has killed at least 83 people and destroyed more than 13,000 homes.

"The rain is really a double-edged sword for this fire," said Rick Carhart, a spokesman with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. He said searchers have "been able to sift through this really fine ash and when rain gets onto that really fine ash, it turns it into sort of a muddy muck and makes it a lot more difficult."

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South prepare for possible downpours

Farther south, residents of communities charred by a Los Angeles-area fire stacked sandbags as they prepared for possible downpours that threaten to unleash runoff from hillsides left barren by flames.

Residents were mindful of a disaster that struck less than a year ago when a downpour on a fresh burn scar sent home-smashing debris flows through Montecito, killing 21 people and leaving two missing.

The 391-square-kilometer (151-square-mile) Woolsey Fire in the Los Angeles area was almost entirely contained after three people were killed and more than 1,600 structures destroyed.

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In Northern California, the wildfire that started two weeks ago has torched an area in Butte County about the size of Chicago, nearly 622 square kilometers (240 square miles) — and was 80 percent contained.

Former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger made a surprise visit to weary firefighters on Wednesday, providing encouragement and helping serve breakfast.

"I wanted to let you know how much I appreciate all the work that you do," he told firefighters during a brief speech.

The 71-year-old actor also slammed President Donald Trump for blaming the wildfire on poor forest management. 

He told firefighters, "you are tough to not only fight the fires, but you are tough to listen to all this crap."

Officials said nearly 870 people were still unaccounted for.

The National Weather Service issued a flash flood watch for Paradise and nearby communities and for those areas charred by wildfires earlier this year in Lake, Shasta, Trinity and Mendocino counties.

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