Fast-moving
wildfire near Yosemite threatens power in San Francisco
A
wildfire raging at the edge of Yosemite National Park is threatening
power lines that provide electricity to San Francisco, prompting
California Governor Jerry Brown to declare a state of emergency.
24
August, 2013
The
fire has damaged the electrical infrastructure serving the city, and
forced the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission to shut down
power lines, the governor said in his declaration.
There
were no reports of blackouts in the city, which is about 200 miles
west of the park.
The
wildfire swept further into Yosemite National Park on Friday,
remaining largely unchecked as it threatened one of the country's
major tourist destinations.
The
so-called Rim Fire, which started last week in the Stanislaus
National Forest, had blackened 11,000 acres at the northeastern
corner of Yosemite as of Friday afternoon after exploding in size
overnight, park spokeswoman Kari Cobb said.
The
blaze burning in the western Sierra Nevada Mountains is now the
fastest-moving of 50 large wildfires raging across the
drought-parched U.S. West that have strained resources and prompted
fire managers to open talks with Pentagon commanders and Canadian
officials about possible reinforcements.
The
park has been posting updates and alerts on its website. (Alerts:
www.nps.gov/yose/index.htm)
The
blaze, which has now charred a total of 165 square miles of forest
land, mostly outside of Yosemite, was about 4 miles west of Hetch
Hetchy Reservoir and some 20 miles from Yosemite Valley, the park's
main tourist center, Cobb said.
The
reservoir provides water to 2.6 million customers in the San
Francisco area. Should the blaze affect the reservoir, the city's
water supply could be affected, Brown said in his declaration.
The
Rim Fire, named for a Stanislaus National Forest lookout point called
Rim of the World, has so far destroyed four homes and 12 outbuildings
and was only 2 percent contained as of Friday.
Highway
120, one of four access routes to a park known for its waterfalls,
giant sequoia groves and other scenic wonders, was temporarily
closed. The highway leads to the west side of the 750,000-acre
(300,000-hectare) park.
Located
195 miles from San Francisco and 315 miles from Los Angeles, Yosemite
attracted nearly 4 million visitors last year.
The
fire was also threatening 4,500 homes, up from 2,500 on Thursday, and
an undisclosed number of homes were ordered evacuated on Friday,
adding to earlier evacuations.
IDAHO
SKI RESORT BATTLES BLAZE
In
Idaho, meanwhile, crews increasingly had the upper hand over a
massive blaze near the ski resort town of Sun Valley, as a storm
system predicted to bring lightning and high winds brought rain
instead.
The
so-called Beaver Creek fire, now 67 percent contained, at its peak
forced out occupants of 2,250 houses in upscale neighborhoods outside
Sun Valley and destroyed one home and seven other buildings in a
resort area in central Idaho where land and properties are valued at
up to $8 billion.
The
2013 fire season has already drained U.S. Forest Service fire
suppression and emergency funds, causing the agency to redirect $600
million meant for other projects like campground and trail
maintenance and thinning of trees to reduce wildfire risks, said
agency spokesman Mike Ferris.
The
service has spent some $967 million to protect lives and properties
amid a season that has seen fires in Idaho, Utah, Colorado and
California threaten homes and communities that border forest and wild
lands where fire is more dangerous and costly to fight, Ferris said.
With
hotshots and other elite fire crews stretched thin, U.S. fire
managers will decide in coming days whether to seek U.S. military or
international aid to check the roughly 50 large fires burning in the
West.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwHERDAZWY8
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