This is where the wildfires in California get personal.
Dido Dunlop, resident in Wellington,New Zealand, writes her own tribute to her friend in California as well as a warning for all of us:
Barbara
McWilliams
"Barbara
was a close friend of mine. Her death is my first personal experience
of losing someone to climate change. She was enthusiastically engaged
in life, interested in everyone, in a positive and compassionate way.
She thought I was a good thing and told me so: that in itself was a
great gift – one she also gave her carer in the article here.
"Despite
being quite disabled, she travelled a lot, mainly looking for a place
to settle. She searched for an intentional community but as a
disabled person without much money, that option was not easy to find.
She moved into her delightful house in the forest less than a year
before it burnt to the ground with her in it.
"We
shared a Tibetan Buddhist teacher; she also did several retreats with
me in New Zealand (I teach meditation). I trust that when faced with
a wall of fire she was able to make use of something from her
training to help herself through.
"Here
in Wellington we recently set up our emergency equipment, for
earthquake or climate trouble; we also packed a getaway pack. We’re
surrounded by forested hills: fire is a real possibility."
Disabled
woman killed in California wildfire could not get out of remote house
14
September, 2015
Barbara
McWilliams walked very slowly because of advanced multiple sclerosis.
But the pace allowed the former special education teacher to use her
“eagle eye” to take in the world's majesty, her caretaker
recalled on Monday.
The
72-year-old McWilliams, who had no vehicle and could not have driven
one, died in her Lake County home on Cobb Mountain over the weekend,
becoming the first reported fatality of the fast-moving Valley fire
and raising questions about evacuation efforts.
The
Sheriff's Department issued a statement saying deputies responded to
the area 22 minutes after receiving a call about her Saturday at 7:12
p.m., but they were unable to reach the home because the subdivision
“had already been engulfed by flames.”
Jennifer
Hittson, 30, who had worked for McWilliams for the last five months —
cleaning the home on a remote wooded property, cutting McWilliams'
hair, chopping her vegetables — tells a different story.
It
is one of growing frustration and despair as she begged officials to
get the woman she had come to admire greatly, but was told by both
deputies and officials with the state Department of Forestry and Fire
Protection that they did not have the time to assist.
“More
should have been done,” said Hittson, of Kelseyville. “She was
disabled. I knew she was in the house. She didn't have family or
friends [nearby]. If they had just listened to me better....”
McWilliams
had spent years in India. She was a practicing Buddhist who insisted
on an immaculate home, one free of chemicals, Hittson said. She had
spent her career working with children with dyslexia, but in
retirement, her health failing, she adored feeding the birds near her
home, where an enormous redwood was among the many trees that made
the sky a tiny window.
“She
had a zest for life,” Hittson said. “She loved the outdoors.”
On
Saturday, Hittson was at the home and noticed smoke shortly before
leaving at 3 p.m. But it seemed so distant she thought it was coming
from the Butte fire far to the east.
As
she drove home, she reached a roadblock and was told that only
residents could go through. No one mentioned evacuations. She had
forgotten her phone and could not check the Internet. By the time she
had reached her home after taking a longer route, she “realized it
was getting serious.”
She
called McWilliams, who told her she had declined an offer to go with
a neighbor to find out more about the fire. McWilliams said she told
the neighbor that she would leave with her after she returned with
more information. The power had gone out.
Hittson
assured her that she would get sheriff's deputies to the house.
McWilliams
was upbeat, saying she would probably stay at a shelter at the Napa
County Fairgrounds in Calistoga.
When
Hittson called the sheriff’s office at 6:30 p.m., she was told by a
dispatcher that deputies would try to get to the home. She tried
another way to check on McWilliams but failed because the phone lines
were down. She called the Sheriff's Department back at 10 p.m. and
says she was told they were “too busy” with general evacuations.
“I
just started crying,” she said.
Then
she learned she could call CalFire. She was told to check back in 30
minutes. When she did, about 11:30 p.m., she was told they had been
unable to reach McWilliams' home. Still, she was assured that the
fire did not appear to have reached the street.
She
tried again Sunday morning and “they still weren't sure if she had
been rescued.”
Efforts
by Hittson to reach the home herself were thwarted by roadblocks.
Hittson took her plea to Facebook, seeking help from anyone who might
know of a back road in from Mendocino County.
Kristy
Ornellas, 28, a former paramedic, tried to help. In her pickup truck
with help from other renegade medically trained residents, Ornellas
hauled four people out in hospital beds or wheelchairs, delivering
them to the Kelseyville Red Cross shelter for ambulances to pick up.
She tried to reach McWilliams, but her long driveway was blocked by
debris.
Then
McWilliams’ daughter, who lives in the Bay Area, reached a neighbor
who said the home had burned to the ground.
By
Sunday night, confirmation came. McWilliams' remains had been found.
Lake
County Sheriff Brian Martin said in a brief interview at a mobile
command post Monday that “the fire spread too violently and too
quickly for us to be able to get to her on time.”
A
family spokesman released a statement saying, "We are devastated
by the death of our beloved mother, grandmother and friend... She was
a retired teacher and true adventurer who enjoyed traveling the
world. Within the last year, she had settled in Middletown, CA and
had fallen in love with her new home and community."
Hittson
has been torn by grief and regret. “I could have made her get in my
car,” she said.
Their
last exchange stays with her.
Just
before Hittson left on Saturday, McWilliams told her to “turn
around and look at me.”
“I
just want to tell you how much I enjoy you, how much I appreciate
you.”
As a postscript, Dido and her project can be contacted here
Embodying
Mother Nature's Wise Love
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