Las Vegas Sun

April 25, 2024

Southern California wildfire grows to 800 acres

Southern California Wildfire

John Antczak / AP

Smoke from a wildfire can bee seen in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., Wednesday April 30, 2014.

Updated Wednesday, April 30, 2014 | 4:10 p.m.

Southern California Wildfire

Students from Los Osos High School are evacuated from the school as a brush fire burning in Day Creek near the Etiwanda Preserve in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., on Wednesday, April 30, 2014. Launch slideshow »

RANCHO CUCAMONGA, Calif. — A wildfire driven by surging Santa Ana winds sent a choking pall of smoke through foothill neighborhoods on Wednesday, forcing the evacuation of at least 1,650 homes and the closure of at least seven schools.

No homes burned, but the smoke prompted mandatory evacuation orders for several areas of town nestled at the base of the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles.

Leo Lemelin, 67, and his family busily loaded several cars with belongings as they prepared to leave.

"We're trying to pack up everything we can into our cars from 45 years of marriage and eight grandchildren," he told the Riverside Press-Enterprise.

More than 500 firefighters battled the flames near this city of 165,000 people.

The fire was reported about 8 a.m., grew to 200 acres by noon, quadrupled in size within a few hours and continued to grow as it roared through dry brush, fire officials said.

Gusts of 60 mph or more prevented firefighting helicopters from taking to the air, CalFire spokeswoman Liz Brown said.

"They are not able to get off the ground, so we are fighting this with ground resources right now," she said.

Classes were canceled at Los Osos High School about an hour after the fire started.

"We're evacuating cause there's high winds and there's a fire right up there," student Shane McHale told KTTV, pointing to the mountains.

The fire erupted in the midst of a heat wave that sent Southern California temperatures soaring into the 90s in some areas.

Los Angeles International Airport recorded a high of 87 degrees, breaking the old record for the day of 86 that was set in 1996.

At Long Beach Airport, the high of 92 broke a 1996 record by two degrees.

Valley areas could see triple digits. High temperatures were expected through Saturday, with humidity in the single digits.

The heat was accompanied by winds gusting to 80 or 90 mph in some mountains and valleys, prompting the National Weather Service to issue red-flag warnings of extreme weather conditions into Thursday night.

Utilities reported about 8,000 people lost power because of wind-related problems such as downed power lines.

Severe winds at Ontario International Airport also caused some flights to be diverted to Los Angeles International Airport, City News Service reported.

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