Death toll in California wildfires reaches historically grim heights – The Denver Post

SANTA ROSA, Calif. – The horrific scale of death and destruction is coming into focus, even as wildfires continue to rage throughout Northern California.Thirty-six confirmed dead, many of them elderly. One victim was 14 years old.Hundreds still missing on Friday.Thousands of homes and businesses destroyed, including whole neighborhoods reduced to smoldering rubble.“We all have suffered a trauma here, and we’re going to be a long time in recovering from this incident,” Santa Rosa Mayor Chris Coursey told reporters.As authorities continue assessing the damage from the most devastating spate of wildfires to strike the state in modern history, the blazes are still burning – with winds expected to return Friday night, breathing dangerous new life into the deadly arc of flames.Firefighters have made some gains with several fires that are no longer expected to grow. But as of Friday morning, 17 fires, including the deadliest in Sonoma, Napa and Mendocino counties, were still uncontained, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.The agency said that some 220,000 acres have been scorched across the state – a collective area bigger than the city of Dallas – as “red flag” conditions spread the fires with frightening speed.On Friday afternoon, federal officials announced they’re suspending routine immigration enforcement in the areas affected by the fires, except “in the event of a serious criminal presenting a public safety threat.”Sonoma County, north of San Francisco, sustained the most damage, with 19 people confirmed dead and 256 still reported missing. Nearly 3,000 homes have been destroyed in Santa Rosa, the county seat and gateway to the wine-tourism industry. An estimated 5,700 structures have been destroyed in the conflagration statewide.Officials say this is now the deadliest week of wildfires in state history. The death toll is certain to rise as authorities – some accompanied by cadaver dogs – continue to explore the wreckage.Taken together, the disastrous blazes – more than 20 in all since Sunday, including at least six in Sonoma County – have killed more people than any other California wildfire on record.Even as emergency personnel battled the fires in and around wine country, authorities began facing questions about the cause of the most damaging blaze, in Sonoma, and whether they did enough to warn vulnerable residents as the flames edged closer to populated areas.The scrutiny marks the next phase of a disaster that erupted seemingly out of nowhere Sunday night, prompting panic among residents who had no idea that a fire was bearing down on them and emergency workers who said they were stunned at the speed with which the fire progressed.The National Weather Service provided a morsel of good news, reporting that the gusts that fueled the blazes and made them harder to fight had died down. The respite was expected to be brief, however, as north winds were expected to kick up by Friday night, according to Cal Fire.Mostly, the news was grim. Sonoma County Sheriff Robert Giordano said deputies had begun the task of searching for the missing and the dead, with bodies showing up in a variety of conditions.“We have recovered people where their bodies are intact,” he said, “and we have recovered people where there’s just ash and bone.”The majority of the victims who have been identified were elderly, except for one: A 14-year-old who was found near his family’s home in Mendocino County. Kai Logan Shepherd was running away from the fire when he was killed, according to the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office.Of the 10 Sonoma County victims who have been named so far, two of whom were identified through medical devices or implants, two through dental records, another by a distinctive tattoo, while others were matched with fingerprints or visuals and other investigative means.Most were from Santa Rosa, and all were older adults, with an average age of 75, the sheriff’s office said. The youngest, Michael John Dornbach, was 57; the oldest, Arthur Tasman Grant, was 95. In neighboring Napa County, an elderly couple who had just celebrated their 75th wedding anniversary were killed on Sunday. Another elderly couple in their 80s were also killed in Mendocino County.Sonoma County spokesman Scott Alonso said it’s not yet clear why the victims were unable to escape the fire. But, he said: “Folks who are elderly have some mobility challenges and are wheelchair-bound. They may not have access to a car. We had calls right when the fires were going on . . . folks needed rides. They needed rides to get out of those mandatory evacuation zones.”Of 1,485 missing-person reports in Sonoma County, 1,250 had been found safe by Friday afternoon, said Giordano, the sheriff. The whereabouts of the 235 missing were still unknown, although it is possible that a number of them were found but not yet reported to authorities. Others may be out of touch because of power outages and downed cell towers. In most cases

Source: Death toll in California wildfires reaches historically grim heights – The Denver Post