USA Insurance

Most of Malibu’s residents ordered to evacuate as Franklin fire leaps in size

https://insurancehubex.online/wp-admin/options-general.php?page=ad-inserter.php#tab-6

A ferocious wildfire was spreading rapidly early Tuesday in Malibu, spurring evacuations along the coast while nearby Pepperdine University issued a campus-wide shelter-in-place order and firefighters struggled to battle the flames.

Most of the eastern half of Malibu has been ordered evacuated, and the rest of the city is under an evacuation warning. Some 6,000 residents live in the area ordered evacuated, firefighters said — most of the city’s population of about 11,000 residents. About 2,000 structures are affected by the mandatory evacuation order.

Dubbed the Franklin fire, the blaze was moving at a fierce pace, fanned by strong Santa Ana winds, and had exploded to more than 850 acres as of 2 a.m., according to the Los Angeles County Fire Department.

Malibu Mayor Doug Stewart told KABC-TV the situation was the “worst possible scenario,” with a fire in the middle of night burning in the area of the Civic Center. “City Hall is right in the middle of all this,” he said. He said, however, that no one had yet been reported injured.

The fire was reported just before 11 p.m. along Malibu Canyon Road and north of Francisco Ranch Road in the hills north of Pepperdine.

Aerial footage from local news stations in the early hours of Tuesday morning showed flames devouring the hills as palm trees were tossed by strong winds. The National Weather Service reported sustained winds of up to 45 mph and gusts of up to 65 mph. The cause of the fire was unclear.

Around 1 a.m. Tuesday, local news outlets reported that the fire had moved into the Serra Retreat area and was threatening structures. The community is about three-fifths of a mile northwest of Malibu Pier and two-thirds of a mile northeast of Malibu Village Mall. There are private homes in addition to a Catholic retreat and conference center noted for its views.

A six-mile stretch of Pacific Coast Highway was ordered closed east of Corral Canyon Road and west of Las Flores Canyon Road, the city of Malibu said. Las Virgenes Road, which continues as Malibu Canyon Road on the way to the coast, is closed south of Mulholland Highway all the way to Pacific Coast Highway, a six-mile stretch of road, the city added.

As of about 2 a.m., a mandatory evacuation order had been issued for a wide swath of the city, including Malibu Pier, Malibu Village Mall, City Hall, and Malibu Colony Plaza, where a Ralphs supermarket is located.

The Franklin fire chewed through bone-dry brush amid low humidity in the Malibu hills.

(KTLA-TV)

Coastal homes along Malibu Road and Malibu Colony Drive are in the evacuation zone as well as a nine-mile stretch of Pacific Coast Highway west of Topanga Canyon and east of Malibu Road.

An evacuation warning along Pacific Coast Highway extended as far east as the edge of Los Angeles city limits, on the border of the Pacific Palisades neighborhood, and as far west as Zuma Beach as of about 2 a.m.

A temporary evacuation center was set up at Palisades Recreation Center at 851 Alma Real Drive. Large animals can be taken to Pierce College, at 6201 Winnetka Ave. in Woodland Hills.

Pepperdine University was in the heart of the evacuation area, but the university directed students and others on campus to remain on campus and abide by the university’s emergency protocol. “All community members on the Malibu campus are directed to shelter in place in the Tyler Campus Center or Payson Library,” Pepperdine shared on X at 1:09 a.m. Tuesday.

One resident of Agoura Hills, more than 10 miles north of the fire, posted a picture on social media Tuesday morning that she took from her backyard of billowing smoke that glowed orange as it rose into the dark sky. The woman, who identified herself as Jodi, told The Times that she and loved ones were “good” but feared for those closer to the flames. “I hope all people and animals stay safe,” she said.

The National Weather Service has issued a “Particularly Dangerous Situation” red flag warning for wide portions of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, which will last through Tuesday afternoon. Gusts of up to 80 mph are possible, and relative humidity is forecast to be alarmingly low, while vegetation is extremely dry.

The weather service said that within the Franklin fire area, strong and damaging winds from the north and northeast were expected to peak around sunrise Tuesday, and last through late Tuesday morning.

Relative humidity levels were as low as 9% just before midnight.

More than 3,500 customers were reportedly without power early Tuesday morning due to the fire, according to Southern California Edison’s online outage map.

This is the second time this fire season that the weather service has issued a Particularly Dangerous Situation red flag warning. The last time the warning was issued was on Nov. 5, and a day later, the Mountain fire ignited in Ventura County and, whipped by powerful winds, razed more than 240 buildings. It became the third-most-destructive wildfire in Southern California since 2013.

The dry, strong Santa Ana winds are being driven by a system of high pressure building in the Great Basin, which is sending air hurtling through canyons and mountain passes to the coast, where there is low pressure.

Malibu and neighboring communities in Thousand Oaks, Oak Park and Agoura Hills saw tremendous destruction in the 2018 Woolsey fire, which destroyed more than 1,600 structures and burned about 97,000 acres.

Pepperdine University has a well-documented “shelter-in-place” protocol when wildfires threaten Malibu, given how difficult it can be to evacuate the campus quickly on narrow roads during a crisis.

The university says the campus’ buildings are built with fire-resistant materials, and brush is cleared at least 200 feet away from structures. The school took some criticism for its shelter-in-place plan after the campus used it during the Woolsey fire in 2018, with some students nervous about remaining on campus.

In an interview on Fox 11 early Tuesday, Pepperdine spokesperson Michael Friel defended the practice even as the wildfire exploded in the hills around the university.

“We have been well-prepared to respond to situations like this,” Friel said. “The campus is the safest place to be at this time.”

Times staff writer Richard Winton contributed to this report.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button