Evacuees Return Amid Progress Against Big California Fire

SANTA CLARITA, Calif.— Most of the roughly 20,000 evacuees forced out by a wildfire were cleared to go home, but firefighters still faced huge work Tuesday in taming an expansive wildfire in mountains north of Los Angeles.The fire’s size increased mo...
Evacuees Return Amid Progress Against Big California Fire
A hillside erupts in flame as a raging wildfire fire burns in Placerita Canyon in Santa Clarita, Calif., July 25, 2016. AP Photo/Nick Ut
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SANTA CLARITA, Calif.— Most of the roughly 20,000 evacuees forced out by a wildfire were cleared to go home, but firefighters still faced huge work Tuesday in taming an expansive wildfire in mountains north of Los Angeles.

The fire’s size increased modestly overnight to 58½ square miles (150.22 sq. kilometers) but containment more than doubled to 25 percent. Authorities, however, remained cautious.

“We’re not really out of the woods,” said U.S. Forest Service spokesman Justin Correll. “We’re not ready to relax. There’s still a lot of firefighting to do.”

A week of triple-digit temperatures awaited the nearly 3,000 firefighters battling flames in rugged terrain between Los Angeles and suburban Santa Clarita, where many homes are tucked into canyon lands.

Residents of two neighborhoods still under threat had to remain out of their homes, the U.S. Forest Service said.

Eighteen residences have been destroyed in the blaze that started Friday afternoon and quickly tore through drought-ravaged brush that hadn’t burned in decades.

Laurent Lacore was among those who evacuated on Saturday, the last of his family of four to leave as the fire bore down on his house.

“The flames were right behind our backyard,” he said.

Lacore was also among many who were told they could return on Sunday only to learn on arriving at the scene that new winds and new flames meant more days in a hard-to-find hotel room.

He returned Monday night delighted to find the house and everything around it had been saved, and could see a line of red fire retardant nearby where a helicopter had stopped the fire’s approach.

“Everything is fine,” he said. “Even all of the trees are there.”

Firefighters saved about 2,000 homes in the fire’s first three days, Los Angeles County Deputy Fire Chief John Tripp said.

A plane drops fire retardant on an unburned ridge in advance of flames as a wildfire fire burns in Placerita Canyon in Santa Clarita, Calif., July 25, 2016. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)
A plane drops fire retardant on an unburned ridge in advance of flames as a wildfire fire burns in Placerita Canyon in Santa Clarita, Calif., July 25, 2016. AP Photo/Nick Ut