Los Angeles Faces Little Relief From Fires as Winds Persist
Los Angeles Faces Little Relief From Fires as Winds Persist · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Dry, hot winds will fan blazes in Los Angeles into midweek — and some forecasts show little relief from the gusts for the rest of January — as Southern California struggles with one of the worst starts to a year for wildfires.

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While good progress has been made blunting two of the region’s smaller blazes, the largest were raging almost out of control Sunday even as thousands of firefighters take on the infernos in what the city fire chief described as a “relentless air attack.” Firefighters from across the US, as well as Canada and Mexico, have converged in California to assist in battling the flames.

Los Angeles City Fire Chief Kristin Crowley told reporters Sunday that favorable winds overnight had helped to slow the spread of the Palisades Fire, but that evacuation orders and warnings remain in place.

Crowley said the Hurst fire, near San Fernando, which stands at 799 acres, is 89% contained. But firefighters are anticipating wind gusts of up to 50 miles per hour on Sunday, with persistent low humidity, she said.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna cautioned residents to stay away from affected areas, which in some cases “look like war zones, there are downed power poles, electric wires, there are still some smoldering fires. It is not safe.”

A stagnant pattern of high pressure and low pressure across the West has created a natural funnel to blast winds over Southern California.

“It is a disastrous pattern and there is not much chance of it changing,” said Bob Oravec, a senior branch forecaster at the US Weather Prediction Center. “If anything it just looks like it reloads across the West and it looks like it gets worse by the end of the month.”

Expanded evacuation areas include the ultra-affluent neighborhoods of Brentwood and Bel Air, as well as some of Los Angeles’ most important cultural institutions. The Getty Center, an architectural landmark with a world-class art collection, has a fire-resistant design that may be put to the test.

The devastation had killed 16 people as of Saturday night. Eleven died in the city of Altadena from the Eaton Fire, while five perished in the Palisades fire.

There are 12 people reported missing related to the Eaton fire and another four in the Palisades area, LA County Sheriff Robert Luna said Sunday, but he expects that number to increase.