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California wildfire sparked by burning car triples in size since Thursday

California wildfire sparked by burning car triples in size since Thursday
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By The Associated Press
Jul. 26, 2024 | CALIFORNIA
By The Associated Press Jul. 26, 2024 | 05:00 AM | CALIFORNIA
A wildfire that has tripled in size in one day, becoming California’s largest of the year even as other blazes scorched the Pacific Northwest, was started by a burning car, authorities said. They arrested a man who was seen pushing the blazing car into a gully.

The man was seen pushing the car in Bidwell Park in Northern California’s Butte County, and it burned completely, spreading flames that caused the Park Fire, county prosecutor Mike Ramsey said in a news release. The blaze had burned more than 257 square miles by early Friday near Chico, a city of about 100,000.

The man calmly left the area, in one of the nation’s largest urban parks, by blending in with other people and fleeing the “rapidly evolving fire,” officials said. The 42-year-old man from Chico was arrested early Thursday and being held without bail until an arraignment hearing Monday, officials said.

Evacuations were ordered in Butte and Tehama counties, with the blaze only 3% contained by Friday morning. About 4,000 residents in unincorporated areas of Butte County and 400 residents of Chico were ordered to evacuate, Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said at a news conference late Thursday.

Also in California, near the Nevada line, about 1,000 people remained displaced Thursday after evacuations were ordered Monday night when lightning sparked the Gold Complex fires in the Plumas National Forest northwest of Reno.

As evacuations continued in California, some Oregon residents were cleared to return home after a thunderstorm produced welcome rain but also potentially dangerous lightning over the biggest active blaze in the United States.

Evacuation orders were lifted for the eastern Oregon city of Huntington, population 500, after a thunderstorm late Wednesday brought some rain and cooler temperatures to the nearly 630 square miles burned by the Durkee Fire, the nation’s biggest, and another nearby blaze.

Baker County Sheriff Travis Ash called the rain a “godsend,” and the Oregon state fire marshal said firefighters were set to “seize the opportunity” of better conditions to push back the fire on the Oregon-Idaho border. It remained unpredictable and was just 20% contained, according to the government website InciWeb.



(AP Photo Noah Berger)
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