evacuees will not be able to return home for “at least a week”

evacuees will not be able to return home for “at least a week”
evacuees will not be able to return home for “at least a week”

10 days after the start of the fires around Los Angeles, the prospect of returning home for evacuees is still distant. It still takes “at least a week”, according to the authorities.

Tens of thousands of residents evacuated because of the fires that engulfed Los Angeles will have to wait “at least one more week” before returning, the authorities warned this Thursday, January 16, in the face of fears of landslides or exposure to toxic substances.

“We have a focus group where everyone is complaining, getting angry, and wondering why we continue to be locked out of our homes,” Ronnen Miz tells local television KTLA.

Among the evacuees, frustration is growing in the face of instructions from local authorities which prevent them from returning home, even if their homes were lucky to escape the violent fires which ravaged certain sectors of the Californian megalopolis and destroyed more than 16,000 hectares since then. about ten days.

The reason: the situation is too dangerous at the moment, local authorities explained during a press conference. Electricity, gas and sewer networks suffered considerable damage. Toxic waste is found everywhere. And the risk of landslides or mudslides is growing.

“It’s going to take a while,” warns Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna. “I would say at least another week, and that’s an estimate, but I think it’s going to take longer than that.”

“We believe there may be other victims”

At least 25 people died in the furious flames that engulfed the town of Altadena, north of Los Angeles, and the upscale neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, in the northwest of the megacity.

This number of victims is likely to increase further in the days to come, as search teams continue to search the rubble.

It is also “because we think that there may be other victims” in certain disaster areas that evacuated residents are prevented from returning there, local authorities further explain.

-

Crews from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) began inspections Thursday to collect pesticides, gasoline and lithium batteries from the mountains of rubble, before the debris can begin to be cleared. In contrast to the recent ultra-dry climatic conditions, it is now possible rain which represents a potential threat.

“The evacuation networks of the two sectors (the most affected) were damaged,” explains Los Angeles County Public Works Director Mark Pestrella.

“In the event of heavy rain, we expect the entire neighborhood and streets to be affected by water flows carrying debris.”

900 inmates fight against the flames

The hills of Los Angeles were destabilized by the fires that swept through them and the enormous volumes of water used by firefighters to fight them.

Apparently intact buildings could also be affected by landslides, adds Mark Pestrella.

Photos from Pacific Palisades show a house, not attacked by the fire, which appears to have split in two from a collapsing hillside after the flames were extinguished.

The violent winds that swept the Los Angeles area for more than a week and fanned the flames calmed Thursday, helping firefighters and more than 900 inmates who came to help them progress in their operations.

“It’s the first thing I’ve done in my life that I’m proud of,” says Jacob Castro, 29, who has spent time in prison and is preparing in one of the firefighting training camps run by the prison authorities. Californians. “It’s a chance to redeem myself,” he rejoices.

-

--

PREV Denver Nuggets vs. Dallas Mavericks: Preview, Predictions and Stats
NEXT Last minute: the message from Dani Olmo – FC Barcelona