MARIPOSA, California, USA - Authorities have sent evacuation orders to some
13,000 phone numbers as an out-of-control wildfire bears down on a
foothill community near Yosemite National Park in Central California.
Sheriff John Anderson issued the evacuation orders late Monday and declared a local state of emergency in Madera County.
The 13,000 calls to evacuate included both homes and businesses, and it
was not immediately clear how many people were involved, sheriff’s
spokeswoman Erica Stuart said.
Four hotels in the community of Oakhurst about 25km away from an
entrance to Yosemite were evacuated and Tuesday classes have been
cancelled for most of the Yosemite Unified School District.
Another 2,500 more calls went out warning people they may also need to evacuate, Stuart said.
The 1,200-acre blaze had burnt at least two structures but it wasn’t immediately clear what they were, officials said.
State Route 41 toward Yosemite was closed down in the area and
travellers would need to use different routes into the park, authorities
said.
The fire was burning near a propane business with 30,000 gallon tanks
on the site. Firefighters were trying to save the facility but were wary
of the danger of explosions.
“We will be in there as long as we can, but firefighter safety is an issue,” state fire Division Chief Don Stein told the Fresno Bee.
There have been no reports of injuries.
Meanwhile, another blaze that began Monday some 50 miles north-east
of Bakersfield has surged to 3,000 acres, or nearly five square miles.“It’s cranking,” US Forest Service spokeswoman Cindy Thill told the Bakersfield Californian.
Source: The Guardian...
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