Largest Wildfire in Los Angeles History Forces Hundreds to Evacuate

Largest Wildfire in Los Angeles History Forces Hundreds to Evacuate
The La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank, California. (REUTERS/Kyle Grillot)
Reuters
9/3/2017
Updated:
9/3/2017

LOS ANGELES—A wildfire on the northern edge of Los Angeles rapidly grew on Saturday into what the mayor called the largest blaze in the city’s history, prompting the evacuation of hundreds of people and the closure of a major highway.

The 5,000-acre (2,023-hectare) La Tuna Fire, named after the canyon area where it erupted on Friday, has led authorities to evacuate more than 700 homes in a north Los Angeles neighborhood and in nearby Burbank and Glendale, officials said.

The La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/Kyle Grillot)
The La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/Kyle Grillot)

 

 
The La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/Kyle Grillot)
The La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/Kyle Grillot)

Authorities warned of erratic winds that could force them to widen the evacuation zone, after the fire destroyed three houses in Los Angeles on Saturday.

“Other than that, no loss of any property,” Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said at a news conference. “That is a pretty amazing thing.”

The fire was only 10 percent contained with more than 500 firefighters battling it.

The blaze in thick brush that has not burned in decades was slowly creeping down a rugged hillside on Saturday toward houses, with temperatures in the area approaching 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius), the Los Angeles Fire Department said in an alert.

“This fire, which broke out yesterday, we can now say is the largest fire in the history of L.A. city, in terms of its acreage,” Garcetti told reporters.

People look on at the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/Kyle Grillot)
People look on at the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/Kyle Grillot)
Flames above houses in Sun Valley during the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)
Flames above houses in Sun Valley during the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)

The La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)
The La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)
Flames rise over Sun Valley homes during the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)
Flames rise over Sun Valley homes during the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)

California Governor Jerry Brown issued an emergency declaration on Friday to free up additional resources to battle the Ponderosa blaze.

Wildfires in the U.S. West have burned more than 7.1 million acres (2.9 million hectares) since the beginning of the year, about 50 percent more than during the same time period in 2016, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

By Alex Dobuzinskis

Spectators watch a helicopter fly over the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)
Spectators watch a helicopter fly over the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)

 

A spectator films the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)
A spectator films the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)

 

Water is dropped above homes in Sun Valley during the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)
Water is dropped above homes in Sun Valley during the La Tuna Canyon fire over Burbank. (REUTERS/ Kyle Grillot)