The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Weather, reinforcem­ents aid battle against California fires

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VACAVILLE, Calif. — Crews aided by better weather and reinforcem­ents with bulldozers made progress Tuesday penning in massive California wildfires that have killed at least seven people and burned nearly 1,300 homes and other buildings.

Firefighte­rs in wine country north of San Francisco had cleared containmen­t lines — used to prevent fires from spreading — around a quarter of blazes there that have scorched more than 550 square miles and destroyed more than 930 buildings.

To the east of San Francisco, firefighte­rs had created containmen­t lines around 15% of a group of fires that has charred more than 568 square miles and is now the third-largest in state history.

And to the south, officials said progress was made against a fire in San Mateo and Santa Cruz counties that has grown to 123 square milesdestr­oyed 330 structures and threatens another 25,000.

Helicopter­s dropped 200,000 gallons of water on the blaze Monday, making it “the best day yet,” said Mark Brunton, operations chief with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire.

“The past couple days we’ve seen significan­t progress in our firefight on this incident,” Brunton said. “The weather’s really cooperatin­g with us.”

Temperatur­es have cooled in the region and lightning strikes that started many of the fires have stopped. Fire crews along with bulldozers were arriving from other states, but officials warned the danger was far from over and admonished residents to stay out of evacuated areas.

Six people who returned to the restricted area north of Santa Cruz to check on their properties were surprised by fire and had to be rescued, authoritie­s said.

Looters have been warned they’ll be arrested, and some people have been taken into custody, including a man found with $5,000 in his car, authoritie­s said. Detectives were also investigat­ing seven reports of missing people.

An estimated 170,000 people remained under evacuation orders and tens of thousands of homes were still threatened from fires around the state.

The fires are blamed for at least seven deaths, among them 70-year-old Mary Hintemeyer, her boyfriend Leo McDermott and his son, Tom, said Hintemeyer’s son, Robert McNeal.

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