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Evacuations for El Dorado Fire, now at 8,600 acres, spreads into Riverside County - San Bernardino County Sun

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  • Paul Kahler, Fountain Valley fire engineer, examines a melted light post where a work room structure was destroyed by the El Dorado wildfire above Yucaipa on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

  • Ryan Dale, Fountain Valley firefighter, puts out hot spots are a studio structure, not a home, completely damaged by the El Dorado wildfire above Yucaipa on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

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  • Fountain Valley firefighters put extinguish hot spots at a studio structure, not a home, completely damaged by the El Dorado wildfire above Yucaipa on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

  • Residents Katrina Taylor, from left, husband David and neighbors keep close watch on the fire as their homes are less an a mile away in Cherry Valley as the El Dorado wildfire continues in Yucaipa on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

  • Thick smoke permeates the area above Yucaipa as the El Dorado wildfire continues as more than 20,000 people have evacuated the 8,600-acre blaze ignited by a gender reveal stunt at El Dorado Ranch Park on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

  • Shane Glaze, San Bernardino Fire Dept. supervisor, is reflected in fire retardant-covered vehicle as the El Dorado wildfire above Yucaipa rages on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. It has burned more than 8,500 acres. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

  • The El Dorado wildfire above Yucaipa on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020 was caused by a pyrotechnic device used to generate smoke during a party, authorities said. It has burned more than 7,000 acres. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

  • The El Dorado wildfire, in its third day, above Yucaipa has burned more than 8,500 acres on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

  • Roads are block at Bryant St. and Hwy. 138 in Yucaipa as the El Dorado wildfire is in its third day on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. It was caused by a pyrotechnic device used to generate smoke during a party, authorities said. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

  • The El Dorado wildfire above Yucaipa has burned more than 8,500 acres on Monday, Sept. 7, 2020. It was caused by a pyrotechnic device used to generate smoke during a party, authorities said. (Photo by Cindy Yamanaka, The Press-Enterprise/SCNG)

More than 20,000 people were evacuated due to the El Dorado fire, a 8,600-acre blaze ignited by a gender reveal stunt at El Dorado Ranch Park in Yucaipa, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said on Monday, Sept. 7, the third day of the blaze.

The fire rapidly doubled in size to 7,050 acres Sunday, Sept. 6, then briefly slowed down overnight before picking up again about 3:30 a.m. It jumped to 8,600 acres by noon Monday, causing evacuation orders to spread into Riverside County.

The 619 firefighters working the blaze managed to reach 7% containment as of Monday, Sept. 7. Containment does not mean how much of a fire has been put out. Rather, it represents a border firefighters have created around the perimeter of a blaze to keep it from spreading. That means a border has been created around 7% of the El Dorado Fire.

Investigators determined a smoke-generating pyrotechnic device at a gender reveal photo shoot Saturday morning started the fire. Initially described as a party, a Cal Fire spokesperson later said the photo shoot only involved immediate family members. During the shoot, a small cylindrical device that burns chemicals to produce colored smoke ignited the grass, according to Bennet Milloy, a captain specialist with Cal Fire.

Cal Fire has yet to determine if the device qualifies as a “safe and sane” firework under California law, but such fireworks are not legal in Yucaipa regardless, Milloy said. The individual responsible for lighting the device has not been arrested at this time. Investigators will send a report to the district attorney’s office and charges will be filed at a later date, Milloy said.

The violations likely will include several charges that qualify as “wobblers,” laws that could be charged as misdemeanors or felonies depending on the severity.

“Our investigation is ongoing,” Milloy said. “The fire has to play out for us to figure what laws were broken.”

The flames initially spread from El Dorado Ranch Park onto Yucaipa Ridge, then split. A more active fire dropped toward the Pine Bench Area near Oak Glen Road, while a slower fire continued to burn above the communities of Mountain Home Village and Forest Falls, officials said.

Firefighters staged near at-risk communities to stop the flames. A crew from the San Bernardino County Fire Department fought back flames overnight Sunday to protect Oak Tree Village in Oak Glen. Working on three hours of sleep in nearly two days, the crew was able to protect residences, businesses and a petting zoo, according to the fire department.

Chris George, a spokesperson for the California Interagency Incident Management Team 11, said crews started controlled burns near Tom’s Farms on Oak Glen Monday afternoon in an attempt to direct the El Dorado fire toward areas already scarred from the Apple Fire, which burned through most of August and consumed more than 33,400 acres, including four homes.

El Dorado caused damage elsewhere, though the extent is unknown still.

“There is structure damage, they have an assessment team going out there, so we don’t know how many structures have been lost,” George said. It could take several days to calculate those totals, he said.

There have been no reported injuries at this time, he said.

The weather and the topography make it hard to predict how the fire might move, he said.

Firefighting aircraft assisted crews on the ground, though officials warned Monday afternoon that heavy winds could ground those efforts. Firefighters worried the winds could also create a fire plume buildup, according to the San Bernardino National Forest.

While temperatures cooled Monday, an excessive heat warning remained in effect until 8 p.m. A Fire Weather Watch will take its place Tuesday and Wednesday. There’s a possibility of Santa Ana conditions later in the week.

Mandatory evacuation orders were in place for residents in the following area as of Monday afternoon: east of Bryant Street from Carter Street south to Yucaipa Boulevard, then east on Yucaipa from Bryant intersection to Freemont Street, then south to Grande View Drive, then along Avenue E southeast to the intersection of Mesa Grande, east to Wildwood Canyone Road, including all portions of Hidden Meadows, and east to Edgar Canyon Road.

An evacuation order was also in place in Mountain Home Village and Forest Falls.

Shortly before noon Monday, evacuation orders spread to Riverside County, that county’s Emergency Management Department said. The evacuation orders are for the Cherry Valley area, north of Cherry Street to the county line.

The American Red Cross has set up an evacuation center at the Yucaipa Community Center, 34900 Oak Glen Road. Volunteers are following safety protocols and providing services while maintaining social distancing, according to the Red Cross. Anyone evacuating animals was directed to the Devore Animal Shelter, 19777 Shelter Way in Devore, or Big Bear Animal Shelter at North Shore Drive and Stanfield Cutoff.

The Red Cross said it provided hotel rooms for 53 families — 118 people total — on Sunday night and will continue assessing shelter needs.

With thousands of residents prompted to evacuate, many are finding difficulty locating hotel rooms – particularly if they have pets.

Ricardo Tomboc, a shelter supervisor at the American Red Cross evacuation center at Yucaipa Community Center, estimated Monday that 95% of evacuees had the financial wherewithal to rent hotel rooms themselves or were staying with family or friends.

Tomboc estimated that 50 families were given vouchers Sunday but that others remained on a waiting list. And seeking a hotel that accepts pets “makes it a lot harder,” he said.

That left people such as the Scalf and Myers families sitting in the park, outside in the smoky 90-degree heat, Monday as they waited for word on a room. As with the Apple Fire, the Red Cross was not putting out cots because of concerns about spreading the coronavirus. Snacks and water were available, though. There were about a dozen people inside the center about 2 p.m. Monday and another dozen outside.

The Scalfs, of Mountain Home Village, sat on a picnic bench and prayed over a lunch of In-N-Out burgers. Philip Scalf, 35, asked God to protect the community and firefighters.

“Please let everyone survive,” he prayed.

His family, which includes his wife, Candace, 36; three children; and three dogs and a cat fled Saturday as the flames crested the mountain and a helicopter crew announced mandatory evacuations.

They were prepared with a bag that included clothes, pet food and bath items. Philip Scalf and son Gunnar, 13, also grabbed their skateboards and guitars.

“We’re going to be doing a lot of skating and playing,” Philip Scalf said, anticipating a lengthy evacuation.

This has been a stressful couple of months for the Scalfs and other Mountain Home residents, with voluntary evacuations orders issued during the nearby Apple Fire.

Still, “I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else,” Candace Scalf said. “Once you live on the mountain, you don’t want to move off. We have a strong community and we take care of each other.”

Richard and Winter Myers, and their young son and daughter sat on the concrete just outside the center Monday. They played a card game while their dog lounged nearby. They also hoped for a hotel voucher after evacuating their mountain home when the fire crested the mountain.

“We love it up there but we just wish people were more respectful,” Richard Myers, 42, said. “Because they don’t live here, they don’t have anything to lose. We have everything to lose.”

Both families were disappointed that the fire that rousted them out of their homes was started by people carelessly using a pyrotechnic to mark a baby’s gender reveal at El Dorado Ranch Park on a scorching-hot day next to tinder-dry brush.

“I know those people feel really bad, but they should not have done it,” said Philip Scalf.

About 3 p.m., the Myers family got good news: A hotel room was found for them and they were looking forward to taking baths. The Scalf family and their menagerie were still waiting.

The Southern California Air Quality Management District issued a smoke advisory that ran from Sunday through to Monday afternoon. The forecast indicated winds would send smoke through the San Gorgonio Pass and into the San Jacinto Mountains. Idyllwild, Banning and the Western Coachella Valley.

The following roads were closed Monday.

  • Highway 38 at Bryant Street and at Angelus Oaks;
  • Bryant Street between Highway 38 and Carter Street;
  • Oak Glen Road between Pine Bench Road and Cherry Croft Drive;
  • Cross streets east of Bryant Street, between Yucaipa Boulevard and Carter Street.

All of the San Gorgonio Wilderness, except for the Pacific Crest Trail, is also closed to the public.

Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency Sunday for San Bernardino County due to the El Dorado Fire. The governor’s proclamation noted that because of the magnitude of fires throughout the state, local governments will require “the combined forces of a mutual aid region or regions to appropriately respond.”

In response to the fires, the U.S. Forest Service announced the closure of a number of its forests, beginning at 5 p.m. Monday and continuing indefinitely until dangerous conditions lessened. A combination of extreme heat, significant wind, dry conditions and overstretched firefighting resources prompted the decision. Rules put in place state-wide also banned campfires and closed developed campgrounds and day-sites.

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