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The San Diego Union-Tribune

 
Predicted showers not likely to snuff stubborn Northern California wildfires

ASSOCIATED PRESS

July 21, 2008

JUNCTION CITY – Scattered showers forecast for California's northern mountains yesterday likely won't extinguish stubborn wildfires still threatening homes but could mean more lightning for the charred region, fire officials said.

A low-pressure system moving in off the coast is not expected to bring enough precipitation to have any effect on several huge blazes that have burned for nearly a month, Cal Fire spokesman Pete Munoa said. A bigger concern is thunderstorms predicted to accompany the front as it moves across the state.

But fire officials said lower temperatures mean lightning would not pose as much of a threat as a month ago, when storms sparked nearly 2,100 fires that have burned almost 1 million acres.

“The weather pattern, if it holds the way it is now, we should be able to get a foothold around these fires,” Munoa said.

In the rural town of Junction City, residents remained under mandatory evacuation orders for a third day yesterday as flames crept across the Shasta-Trinity National Forest. The month-old fire had spread to nearly 87 square miles and was 49 percent contained yesterday.

All but 34 of the fires sparked after a lighting storm June 20 have been contained around the state, leaving nearly 1,470 square miles of destruction in what officials call the largest fire event in California history. Fires consumed roughly 1,563 square miles in all of 2007.

A handful of residents near Dry Lake in Humboldt County were still under orders to stay away from their homes as another remote blaze spread to more than 18 square miles. That fire was 60 percent contained yesterday.

Authorities say most of California's remaining fires are on remote federal forest lands and pose little threat to homes.

Meanwhile, about 4,500 residents in Palm Springs remained without power after a desert rainstorm that closed several roads and flooded some businesses. National Weather Service officials said more than an inch of rain fell in some parts of the Coachella Valley between 6 and 7 a.m. yesterday.

A Southern California Edison spokeswoman said the wind and rain battered power lines, leading to the outages. She did not know when power would be restored.

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