Intense Santa Ana winds swept into Southern California Monday morning and whipped up a 3,000-acre wildfire, forcing the closure of a major freeway during rush hour and burning mobile homes and industrial buildings.
“This is what we feared the most,” said Los Angeles County fire Capt. Mark Savage. “The winds that were expected, they have arrived.”
The blaze, 20 miles north of downtown Los Angeles, began Sunday and was calm overnight, but flared up early Monday when winds gusting to 65 mph moved in.
Re-energized flames jumped the Foothill Freeway, which was then closed in both directions for a three-mile stretch in northern Los Angeles amid the morning rush hour, officials said.
“That was quite a jump, that’s an eight-lane fire break,” said fire spokesman Paul Hartwell.
Fire Inspector Ron Haralson said the blaze had reached a mobile home park and an industrial area, but could not say how many structures had burned. The park was evacuated earlier Monday before flames reached it, he said.
The fire sent about 1,200 people from their homes over the weekend. All remained evacuated Monday morning, when the winds arrived and marked the start of the region’s serious fire season.
Wind-whipped LA wildfire burns mobile homes
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